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Dr. Bret Marsh Named as Purdue’s New Dean of College of Veterinary Medicine

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Dr. Bret Marsh has been named by Purdue University as their new Dean of the College of Veterinary Medicine. Marsh, who is the State Veterinarian with the Indiana State Board of Animal Health (BOAH), was part of a panel discussion on Ag Emergency Preparedness during the NASDA Annual Meeting in Indianapolis in September. Photo: C.J. Miller / Hoosier Ag Today.

Purdue University has announced that Dr. Bret Marsh, State Veterinarian and the state’s top-ranking animal health leader with the Indiana State Board of Animal Health, will join Purdue to serve as its next dean and hospital CEO of the College of Veterinary Medicine.

Marsh will step into his Purdue role on Nov. 4 as dean and clinical professor of veterinary medicine, with a focus on Purdue’s One Health initiative. He succeeds distinguished veterinary pathologist and campus leader Willie Reed, who served 17 years as dean and for whom the Reed Animal Disease Diagnostic Laboratory on campus is named.

Marsh, a first-generation college student from rural Indiana who earned his bachelor’s degree in animal sciences from Purdue’s College of Agriculture and his Doctor of Veterinary Medicine from the college he will now lead, has held several national leadership roles throughout his tenure with the state of Indiana. Among these, he served as special detail to the U.S. Secretary of Agriculture’s homeland security staff following 9/11 and has held leadership roles with the United States Animal Health Association, serving as president and as a member of its board of directors.

He has also assisted the American Veterinary Medical Association — the primary accrediting body for colleges of veterinary medicine worldwide — as the state’s delegate and later as a six-term treasurer, and the Indiana Veterinary Medical Association as its president and board chair.

“My career in veterinary medicine has been built on safeguarding animal health through innovation and partnerships, with a passion for public service to the people of Indiana. I look forward to continuing those efforts as dean,” Marsh said. “As Indiana state veterinarian, I saw how animal health is inextricably linked to environmental and human health — from food safety to farms to pets in our homes. I want to ensure Purdue is leading the way in One Health through research and preparing the next generation of veterinarians.”

“I couldn’t be more pleased to have recruited someone of Dr. Marsh’s caliber to take our cherished college to new heights,” said  Purdue University Provost Patrick Wolfe. “There is much work to do in advancing our land-grant mission, both by better serving our state and by advancing us to the top rank of colleges nationally.”

The priorities for Marsh as the college’s next leader are clear: enhance and expand its research profile, take a leading role in the university’s One Health strategic priority and concomitant design of a new Life Sciences Research Building, and create net “veterinarian brain gain” for Indiana.

Over the course of his career, Marsh has:

Source: Purdue University