Office for Diversity, Equity and Inclusion Welcomes New Staff Member

Jessyca Waddell portrait

Purdue Veterinary Medicine is pleased to welcome the newest addition to the Office for Diversity, Equity and Inclusion, Jessyca Waddell, who accepted the position of Vet Up! Outreach Coordinator, effective February 10.  As part of her new role, Jessyca is responsible for recruiting participants at conferences and career fairs, working with new and current program participants to refine their applications to veterinary school, and helping Purdue DVM students who are Vet Up! participants on their road to graduation and beyond.

Originally from northern Indiana, Jessyca has always loved animals and is a ten-year 4-H member, as well as a collegiate 4-H member. She received her bachelor’s degree in animal sciences from Purdue University in 2014 and was actively involved in campus life during her studies. She served as the historical co-chair of the Alpha Phi Omega National Service Fraternity, the secretary of Purdue Collegiate 4-H, and held various offices with the Purdue University Pre-Veterinary Medical Association as well as the American Pre-Veterinary Medical Association.

After graduating, Jessyca worked as the project assistant at the National AgrAbility Project. Housed in Purdue’s Agricultural and Biological Engineering Building, the program strives to improve the quality of life of agricultural workers with disabilities. Jessyca also worked with Tippecanoe County’s 4-H program as the veterinary science superintendent, a responsibility which triggered her interest in education. She went on to earn a master’s in youth development from Kansas State University in 2019.

While pursuing her master’s, Jessyca moved to California for a short time to work for the Nsefu Wildlife Conservation Foundation as their director of philanthropy.  She later returned to Purdue as an Instructor for the Purdue Athletes Life Success Program (PALS), where she developed an animal-centric curriculum for the participants, all of whom are low-income youth of elementary and middle school age.

“The unique combination of my degrees gives me a strong background in animal and veterinary sciences, as well as in education and development that will help me guide students,” said Jessyca. “My own personal experiences also will allow me to help them realize their dreams of becoming veterinarians. I worked in the Animal Sciences Department while I was a pre-veterinary student at Purdue University and advised many students in that role.”

Jessyca has two dogs, a Malipom named Cappie and a Maltese named Fynn, and you can find pictures of both of them in her office in Lynn 2133.  You can also reach her at 496-4997 or via e-mail at jlwaddell@purdue.edu.

Please join us in welcoming Jessyca to the PVM family!

Writer(s): Maya Sanaba, PVM Communications Intern | pvmnews@purdue.edu

Recent Stories

“Paws Up” – brought to you by the PVM Wellness Committee

This week, we are proud to recognize Lorraine Fox, who is a business assistant with the Veterinary Medicine Procurement Center.

PVM Interview Days Move College Closer to Admitting the DVM Class of 2030

After a total of three afternoons dedicated to conducting in-person interviews with 226 prospective veterinary students, the Purdue University College of Veterinary Medicine is close to completing the process of admitting 84 members of the incoming first-year DVM class – the Class of 2030.  The students invited for the interview days were selected from a total pool of 1,930 applicants from across the country as well as countries abroad.

Experts to Gather at Purdue for Conference Addressing the Public Health Threat of Antimicrobial Resistance

The ongoing challenges posed by multi-drug resistant infections will be the focus of a multidisciplinary conference taking place in three weeks at Purdue University.  The Fourth Annual Conference on Antimicrobial Resistance is set for February 25–26, 2026 at Purdue’s Stewart Center in West Lafayette. Registration is still open for the event, which will bring together scientists and scholars from human and veterinary medicine, public health, research, and industry to address the determinants, dynamics and deterrence of drug resistance.

PVM’s Upcoming Coppoc One Health Lecture to Focus on Dogs as Sentinels of Environmental Exposure

The Purdue University College of Veterinary Medicine brings a leading One Health scholar to campus each year to address vital health issues from a One Health perspective as part of the Coppoc One Health Lecture series.  This year’s presentation, scheduled for February 26 in Lynn Hall Room 2026, is on the engaging topic, “One Health at Home: Dogs as Sentinels of Environmental Exposure.” The speaker will be Audrey Ruple, DVM, MS, PhD, DACVPM, MRCVS, the Dorothy A. and Richard G. Metcalf Professor of Veterinary Medical Informatics at the Virginia-Maryland College of Veterinary Medicine at Virginia Tech.

“Paws Up” – brought to you by the PVM Wellness Committee

Today we are happy to acknowledge our Student Success Center Team.

One Health: A ‘digital twin’ model for predicting cancer outcomes

The striking similarities between invasive bladder cancer in dogs and humans have fueled research advances for more than three decades. Most of that work has looked at separate aspects of the disease — risk factors, early detection, symptoms, treatment and gene expression. But a new project at Purdue University that combines many types of available data in a “digital twin” model of bladder cancer may prove powerful enough to predict patient outcomes, starting with the probability of metastasis.

Purdue Professor Emeritus Bill Blevins Wins Lifetime Achievement Award at ACVR Annual Meeting

The American College of Veterinary Radiology (ACVR) gave its esteemed Lifetime Achievement Award for 2024 to Purdue Professor Emeritus Bill Blevins, who is well known to countless Purdue Veterinary Medicine alumni for the expertise he taught them about all things Diagnostic Imaging during his long Purdue career.