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While this represents an exciting new journey for the Journal and its readership to embark upon, I must bid adieu as my path is following a different direction. While the decision to pass the role of editor on to someone else has been a difficult one, it was a wonderful dilemma to be faced with. On the one hand was the option to continue as JAAHA editor and forge into new territory that promises to bring many more wonderful enhancements as time unfolds. On the other hand was a career opportunity with an emerging pharmaceutical company, also forging new territory in the field of companion animal medicine. While I chose the latter, I will continue to play a part in the Journal in the role of "logged-on" reader.
It is with great pleasure that I provide the introduction to JAAHAs new editor, Dr. Rhea Morgan. For most, no further introduction is necessary, as Dr. Morgans high-profile career as a veterinarian, lecturer, author, and editor speaks for itself and has already touched many in the veterinary profession. A diplomate of both the Colleges of Veterinary Internal Medicine and Ophthalmology, Dr. Morgan has played significant roles in both academia and private practice, including Bostons Angel Memorial Animal Hospital, the University of Tennessees College of Veterinary Medicine, and Rowley Memorial Animal Hospital in Springfield, MA. The author of textbooks and many articles in peer-reviewed journals, she most recently held the position of senior editor for an online veterinary information resource network. She has also been honored by state and national veterinary medical associations for her contributions, including receiving the AAHAs Award for Distinguished Service in 1990. It is an honor for the JAAHA editorial team to welcome her to the fold and a testament to the stature that JAAHA has attained to attract such an accomplished individual.
Change is inevitable, and it is not so much the change that generates anxiety for those involved, but how that change is managed. For me, this is simply not an issue, because I take great comfort in the knowledge that I am passing the reins into hands that are far more capable than my own.
I will look back on this time and the accomplishments achieved as a definite highlight in my veterinary career. I have been proud to be part of the JAAHA editorial team, a team that was never afraid to "think outside the box" and break new ground; hence living by my personal guiding philosophy, so eloquently summed up by Ralph Waldo Emerson:
"Do not go where the path may lead. Go instead where there is no path and leave a trail."
Journal of the American Animal Hospital Association
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