Shirley D. Johnston, DVM, PhD, DACT,
is dean of the College of Veterinary Medicine at the Western University
of Health Sciences
in Pomona, Calif.
What is the most exciting change you've seen in veterinary medicine?
 I'm inspired by the transformation that veterinary education can make.
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The move to embrace animal welfare, initially championed by Dr. Leo Bustad. This move has caused a change, still ongoing,
in the veterinarian's primary role as a responder to disease and injury to that of a holistic healthcare provider with significant
responsibility for preventing disease, enhancing the human-animal bond, and promoting animal well-being. Veterinarians should
see themselves as animal advocates and public health resources, which includes an expanded role in aiding national security
and preventing bioterrorism.
Who was your most memorable patient?
They were all memorable, and I loved them all, well, except for the chow chow that tried to bite me while I was trying to
collect semen from him.
Who inspired you most in your career?
Dr. Carl Osborne, who taught me to think critically; Dr. Raimunds Zemjanis, who helped me appreciate the value of excellence
and stubbornness; and my dear husband, Dr. Gary Johnston, who always reminds me of what really matters in life.
What was the best professional advice you ever received?
Always wear comfortable shoes. You have to run fast, leap over obstacles, and land on your feet.
What would you advise a new graduate?
Understand what income you need to generate to justify your salary. Commit to being a lifelong learner in your field. Take
on the responsibility of being a community leader. Look for opportunities to be an ambassador for the profession. Set goals
that require you to stretch your abilities. And wear comfortable shoes.
You were the first female president of the American College of Theriogenologists and are the only female dean of a U.S. veterinary
college. How has being a woman affected your career in veterinary medicine?
Dr. Elizabeth Stone is the new dean of the University of Guelph's Ontario Veterinary College, and Dr. Sheila Allen is serving
as interim dean of the University of Georgia's College of Veterinary Medicine. These are important leadership roles for women
in veterinary academia. Gender issues that the profession still struggles with include salary differences between men and
women, the paucity of women leaders as deans and department heads in our colleges, and the importance of striking a gender
balance in our admission and graduation processes. I believe that our profession will be strongest if it looks like the populations
we serve, with similar representation of men and women and full participation by people of color. Being a woman has affected
my veterinary career in many ways, most of them positive, but it has not defined nor limited my career.
As women graduate from veterinary schools in record numbers, what will be the effect on the profession?
Female veterinarians have demonstrated competence in all dimensions of our profession. However, we have not always succeeded
in achieving representation proportionate to our numbers. All of us have times when we see men and women differently, communicate
with the genders differently, or, unconsciously, develop different expectations of men and women. Therefore, I believe that
we have a societal responsibility to be inclusive and to consistently and proactively endeavor to draw men and women and people
of color into all of our activities.
Are you a cat person or a dog person?
Both. Since our children have left home, our remaining family consists of Shadow, an elderly golden retriever; Kona, a middle-aged
Akita cross; Grace, a nasty 19-year-old cat that we dearly love; and Blinky, a one-eyed, long-haired black cat that we adopted
after the shelter told us no one would adopt her because of the superstition about black cats. They saw us coming.
What book would you recommend?
Animals in Translation: Using the Mysteries of Autism to Decode Animal Behavior by Temple Grandin and Catherine Johnson. This book promotes the hypothesis that people with autism and animals do not filter
afferent stimuli the way people without autism do. I would recommend it to veterinarians because it helps us see animals in
a different way.