Rooted at Mizzou, rising in medicine

Jess Taylor Brune has already earned the confidence of her mentors. From discovering anesthesiology almost by accident to being invited into a faculty role after she completes her residency, her path shows how Mizzou recognizes talent and invests in future leaders.

By Nicholas Childress

Jess Taylor and a white cat

April 6, 2026
Photo by Karen Clifford

Jess Taylor Brune makes some of her most critical decisions long before a patient ever enters the operating room.

As a veterinary anesthesiology resident, her work demands preparation, judgment and a calm command when animals are at their most vulnerable. Much of that work happens quietly and behind the scenes, but it helps shape every outcome that follows.

It is also why, years before she will complete her residency program, the University of Missouri College of Veterinary Medicine has invited her to become a faculty member.

That certainty didn’t come from a single moment. It unfolded gradually, shaped by curiosity, mentorship and a university that gave Taylor Brune the freedom to explore, pivot and lead. It also reflects a high level of confidence and speaks to the kind of leader Mizzou is intentional about building and keeping.

A place to explore and a reason to stay

Raised in Hannibal, Missouri, Taylor Brune always knew medicine was in her future. Time spent shadowing veterinarians in her hometown helped connect her ambition to animal care, but when she arrived at Mizzou as an undergraduate, she was still figuring out where she fit.

She chose to major in biology for the flexibility it offered — a way to explore broadly while keeping her options open. Mizzou already felt familiar. Both of her parents were alumni, and she developed a love for the university long before she ever stepped on campus as a student. What ultimately convinced her to stay for her advanced degree, though, was confidence in the education she was receiving and the freedom to discover her path without pressure to rush the decision.

“I came to Mizzou not knowing what areas of medicine I was going to go into,” Taylor Brune said. “But as I started learning more about different fields, I found myself defending veterinary medicine in my mind constantly. I took that as a sign that this was the right field for me.”

After being admitted into Mizzou’s College of Veterinary Medicine, her training took on new momentum.

The path that found her

For much of veterinary school, Taylor Brune gravitated toward emergency medicine. She thrived in fast-paced environments and complex cases that demanded clear thinking under pressure, moments when preparation, decisiveness and teamwork mattered most.

After earning her doctor of veterinary medicine, she was hired as a staff veterinarian at the Veterinary Health Center, splitting her time between emergency and anesthesia services. The dual role gave her a rare opportunity to stay rooted in emergency medicine while gaining deeper exposure to anesthesiology, and it quietly reshaped how she viewed patient care.

Now a second-year resident in veterinary anesthesiology, Taylor Brune balances advanced clinical training with teaching and mentorship, helping students build confidence in a specialty that can feel intimidating.

“That’s the best type of learning,” she said. “You go figure it out, then you teach it to a student. It forces you to really know what you’re talking about.”

Read more from the College of Veterinary Medicine

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