Page 33 - The Hunt - Spring 2022
P. 33

                 to the way she handles concerns,” says
Dr. Kathy Anderson, whose Equine Veterinary Care at Fair Hill Training Center in nearby Maryland oversees the needs of the over
750 horses quartered there. “Whenever I see
a problem I think needs fixing, it’s usually resolved in a manner I might not have been aware existed. [New Bolton is] always on the front end of technology developments.”
Chester County veterinarian Cindy Buchanan has known Dallap-Schaer since she was a student at Penn and the latter an intern. “This is a huge horse community with very expensive horses, so it’s great to have all the diagnostic services and emergency care that New Bolton offers,” says Buchanan.
Dallap-Schaer received her bachelor’s degree in animal biosciences and
microbiology from Penn State University
in 1990 and her VMD from Penn in 1994. Then she interned for a year at Rood & Riddle Equine Hospital in Lexington, K.Y., before returning to New Bolton in 1995 for her residency. She later did an alternate-track residency in emergency/critical care at New Bolton between 2001 and 2003. She was named chief of emergency services there that



























































































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