veterinary medicine

Research is the product of repeatedly working on a problem and steadily accumulating findings.

I am researching Anopheline mosquitoes that are carriers of malaria in the Laboratory of Veterinary Parasitology. I became interested in parasites thanks to a delightful class on veterinary parasitology that I took during my third year. While I never have the best grades, I do enjoy studying if I am interested in the subject. I went on to join the Laboratory of Veterinary Parasitology in my fourth year after getting a good grade in this class. As my family runs a veterinary practice, I initially talked about wanting to set up the best veterinary hospital in Japan; in fact, many people from our lab do go on to become clinical veterinarians. However, the more research I did for my graduation thesis, the more I didn’t want to stop after submitting it, and I decided to enter the Graduate School.

Students are not told what to study in the lab, and they must think about their research topic by themselves. The idea is that it will serve the students well in whatever field they work for them to set out the topic they would like to research and why, how they plan to do it, and, after executing the research, scrutinizing the results regardless of whether or not the aims were achieved. I also experienced many new opportunities at university, such as presenting my research at several conferences. Mosquitoes carrying serious infectious diseases are allegedly the animal responsible for the most human deaths globally. I hope to contribute to society by researching ways to control outbreaks of Anopheline mosquitoes.

veterinary medicine

(at sentence-end, falling tone) indicates a confident conclusion

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