Beyond the Scalpel: Dr. Ankit Pal on Why Veterinary Surgeons Are Essential to the Future of Healthcare
By Dr. Ankit Pal If I told you that a veterinarian may have contributed to the safety of a life-saving cardiac stent, helped train a surgeon, advanced biomedical research, supported the fight against...
By Dr. Ankit Pal
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If I told you that a veterinarian may have contributed to the safety of a life-saving cardiac stent, helped train a surgeon, advanced biomedical research, supported the fight against emerging diseases, and then returned home to perform surgery on a dog or a cow, all within the same profession, would you believe me?
For many people, the word veterinarian evokes the comforting image of a doctor treating pets or livestock. While this image is both familiar and true, it tells only a small part of the story. Modern veterinary medicine has evolved into one of the most interdisciplinary professions in healthcare, quietly contributing to scientific innovation, surgical education, public health, environmental sustainability, and the global vision of One Health.
Perhaps it is time we broaden our understanding of what a veterinarian truly represents.
Beyond Animal Care
Animal health will always remain the heart of veterinary medicine. Every day, veterinarians restore health to companion animals, strengthen livestock production, protect wildlife, improve food security, and safeguard animal welfare. These responsibilities form the foundation of our profession.
Yet veterinary science extends far beyond clinical practice. It has become an essential pillar supporting advances in both animal and human healthcare.
The Invisible Contribution
Many of the medical technologies we take for granted today begin their journey long before they reach a hospital.
Whether developing a novel cardiac stent, evaluating a surgical implant, testing an innovative biomaterial, refining a minimally invasive procedure, or validating a new therapeutic approach, scientific innovation depends upon rigorous preclinical evaluation. Veterinary surgeons contribute through comparative anatomy, physiology, anaesthesia, laboratory animal science, ethical research, and translational surgical models.
Their work often remains invisible to the public, yet countless medical advances have been strengthened by veterinary expertise before benefiting human patients.
One Profession, Two Worlds
Healthcare has entered an era where knowledge no longer belongs to a single profession.
Simulation laboratories, minimally invasive surgery, robotic platforms, cadaveric training, and structured wet-laboratory programmes have transformed surgical education into a collaborative endeavour. Increasingly, veterinary surgeons work alongside physicians, engineers, biomedical scientists, and educators to create safe environments where complex procedures can be mastered before entering the operating theatre.
The exchange of knowledge is no longer one-directional. Veterinarians learn from medical specialists, while medical professionals increasingly recognise the unique anatomical, surgical, and translational expertise that veterinary surgeons bring to multidisciplinary teams.
When professions learn together, healthcare advances together.
One Health: A Shared Responsibility
One Health is often introduced as the study of diseases shared between humans and animals. While zoonotic diseases remain critically important, the philosophy extends much further.
Human health, animal health, and environmental health are inseparable. Antimicrobial resistance, food safety, biodiversity conservation, disaster preparedness, wildlife management, environmental sustainability, and pandemic preparedness all demand collaboration across disciplines.
Veterinarians are uniquely positioned within this framework because they are trained to understand health across species rather than within a single one. This perspective allows them to connect ecosystems that are too often viewed in isolation.
Looking Towards Tomorrow
The future of healthcare will be defined not by individual professions but by interdisciplinary collaboration.
Artificial intelligence, robotic surgery, regenerative medicine, precision therapeutics, advanced simulation, xenotransplantation, and translational biomedical research will increasingly require physicians, veterinarians, engineers, and life scientists to work as one integrated team.
Rather than asking where veterinary medicine fits into the future of healthcare, perhaps we should ask how much of that future can truly be realised without it.
The veterinary profession has never been defined solely by the animals it heals. Its greatest strength lies in its ability to connect science with compassion, research with clinical practice, education with innovation, and animal health with human well-being.
As the boundaries between disciplines continue to dissolve, veterinary surgeons will not simply participate in shaping the future of healthcare. They will help lead it.
(Dr. Ankit Pal is a Veterinary Scientist at the Jayaramdas Patel Academic Centre (JPAC), Muljibhai Patel Urological Hospital, Nadiad.)




