
Dr. Schott is an internationally renowned academic equine internal medicine specialist and was elected by his colleagues as president of the Large Animal Specialty of the American College of Veterinary Internal Medicine (the only WSU CVM alumnus to have been afforded this honor). He then took it upon himself to initiate, organize and lead what is now known worldwide as the ACVIM – Large Animal Internal Medicine Boot Camp, a four-day long, hands-on in-depth training program he created for equine medicine residents from across the globe. The intent was to give aspiring specialists the chance to learn to perform advanced medical diagnostic techniques they might otherwise not have been exposed to during their training programs. He insisted in his position as president of ACVIM-LA that the College had to take on some responsibility for helping train these young people, rather than relying on the individual veterinary clinical training programs to do so, and he made it happen. It is now a globally acclaimed program. At WSU, Dr. Schott also completed a PhD in equine exercise physiology and used this training as a springboard for a career-long research interest in endurance horse physiology. He was a member of teams completing field studies of endurance horses in Idaho, Michigan, Virginia, California, Newmarket, and Dubai. Later in his career, Dr. Schott’s attention was directed to the need for better care for aging horses and at Michigan State University he oversaw the largest cohort of horses enrolled in the FDA trial to license pergolide for treatment of Pituitary Pars Intermedia Dysfunction in horses. He continues to perform research studies on endocrine disorders in horses and has authored over 120 manuscripts and multiple book chapters.


























































