Dr. Susan Lana
Before
I even knew I wanted to be a veterinarian, I had an interest in
studying cancer. While in college, I worked in the blood bank of a
hospital with a large bone marrow transplant unit. There, I began to
understand that cancer is so different. It’s not just one disease,
it’s many diseases with many different outcomes. It’s also a
non-discriminatory disease; anybody can get it. You don’t have to be
rich or poor, black or white, or a dog or a cat…anybody can be touched
by cancer. I knew cancer was something I could see myself learning
about for a long time.
After college, I thought about going
to medical school to advance my scientific degree. But when I
volunteered for the Denver Dumb Friends League, I realized that I
really like working with animals and my interest turned to veterinary
medicine. I decided to enter veterinary school at Colorado State
University. It wasn’t until a lecture by a veterinary oncologist in my
freshman year of vet school, that I discovered there was a cancer
specialty in veterinary medicine, just like in human medicine. And
during a summer job with the Animal Cancer Center, when I saw how the
oncology doctors interacted with the clients, the patients, and the
nursing staff, I was hooked. I realized there’s a lot that I can do
for people and their pets by studying cancer.
Cancer is a very
emotionally charged subject and being able to function in all that
emotion is an important skill. I have a lot of compassion for people,
and I love being someone who can help people through a diagnosis of
cancer. When people are upset or don’t know what to do, sometimes they
need a calming presence to be there and say, “Here are some choices.
This is how we can help your pet.” I can help to bring them hope.
There’s just so much that can be done for pets with cancer, and that’s
what I love being part of.
Seeing the advances in technology
and the advanced supportive care that we can do to help patients now,
has made this an especially rewarding career. We now treat a patient
with multiple modalities – radiation therapy and surgery and
chemotherapy – as well as do advanced procedures similar to what you
would expect to be done for human patients. These advancements are due
to growth in the fields of imaging, anesthesia, and critical care as
well as improved techniques in medical and surgical oncology.
Everybody involved, from the doctors, to the students and nursing staff
contribute to the mission of the Animal Cancer Center. We rely on each
other to move things forward.
One of the differences between
being a regular veterinarian, or a veterinarian in a specialty
practice, and being at a place like the Animal Cancer Center is we do
more than just see clients and treat patients. We move the greater
body of knowledge about cancer forward, for veterinary patients and
human patients. All the other things that go into our days, like
teaching, doing research, and collecting tissue samples, are equally
important to our mission. These all combine to help the Animal Cancer
Center move forward – which helps all cancer knowledge move forward –
and helps to apply what we learn to human cancer patients. It’s my
hope that someday an oncologist treating human patients, will benefit
from something that was learned here.
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