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Dr Gayle Hallowell
MA VetMB CertVA DipACVIM PhD DipACVECC PFHEA
FRCVS
- Location: Leicestershire
- Year of Fellowship: 2018
Field of work
Industry and commerce
Areas of special interest
- Equine internal medicine
- Food animal internal medicine
- Sports medicine
Areas of support
- Collaborative research
- Innovation in professional practice
- One Health Agenda
Professional positions
- Professor of Veterinary Internal Medicine& Critical Care, University of Nottingham
- Secretary, BCVSp
- Chair, ACVIM Examination Committee
- Chair, ACVIM Case Management Committee
- ACVECC Exam Committee
Biography
Gayle Hallowell graduated from the University of Cambridge in 2002 and then went on to complete a large animal rotating internship and then large animal internal medicine and critical care residency at the Royal Veterinary College.
In 2007, she moved to the newly opened vet school at the University of Nottingham to complete an HBLB funded PhD studying Aortic Valve Prolapse in the Horse.
She is currently Professor in Veterinary Internal Medicine at the University of Nottingham.
She is an American Diplomate in Large Animal Internal Medicine and Emergency and Critical Care, Associate Diplomate of the European College of Veterinary Diagnostic Imaging and Principal Fellow of the Higher Education Academy.
She is still clinically active, spending at least 60% of her time undertaking clinical work, primarily at the Defence Animal Training Regiment, Melton Mowbray.
She loves to manage internal medicine cases in whatever species presents.
In 2007, she moved to the newly opened vet school at the University of Nottingham to complete an HBLB funded PhD studying Aortic Valve Prolapse in the Horse.
She is currently Professor in Veterinary Internal Medicine at the University of Nottingham.
She is an American Diplomate in Large Animal Internal Medicine and Emergency and Critical Care, Associate Diplomate of the European College of Veterinary Diagnostic Imaging and Principal Fellow of the Higher Education Academy.
She is still clinically active, spending at least 60% of her time undertaking clinical work, primarily at the Defence Animal Training Regiment, Melton Mowbray.
She loves to manage internal medicine cases in whatever species presents.