Promoting Alternatives at the Medical College of Wisconsin
Last month thousands of people in the Milwaukee area read some
disturbing news in their local newspaper, the Milwaukee Journal
Sentinel. A front-page story reported that Milwaukee’s
Medical College of Wisconsin (MCW) is one of the few medical schools
in the country that still uses live dog labs.
The newspaper coverage discussed PCRM’s ongoing campaign
to end live animal labs in medical schools. In March, 52 dogs at
MCW were used in a lab exercise on the circulatory system. The
dogs were operated on while under anesthesia and then euthanized.
Most medical schools have abandoned the practice of using live
animals in favor of more sophisticated technology. In fact, 105
of the 125 U.S. medical schools do not use live animals of any
species in any of their medical training.
Besides the ethical concerns involved, animal laboratories are
simply unnecessary. Most universities now use a combination of
computer programs and sophisticated human simulators. These options
have many educational benefits over live animals, the most important
being the student’s ability to repeat the procedures as many
times as necessary to master a task.
"Medical students learn at different rates,” said John
J. Pippin, M.D., F.A.C.C., a PCRM cardiologist. “Of the five
students working on that dog, some will get it and some won't.
And those who don't need to repeat the lesson over and over again.
The dog lab doesn't give them that opportunity.”
The sources from which many schools receive dogs for live animal
labs are also a cause for concern. MCW buys dogs from a Random
Source Class B Animal Dealer. Many Class B dealers purchase dogs
from random sources, such as flea markets or newspaper ads, and
then resell them to research facilities, veterinary schools, or
medical schools. USDA records show that MCW’s dog dealer
has had problems with sick animals and substandard housing conditions.
What You Can Do
Please e-mail
or send a letter to the dean of the Medical College of Wisconsin
and urge him to end the use of live animals in the physiology
course.
Medical College of Wisconsin
Michael J. Dunn, Dean
8701 Watertown Plank Rd.
Milwaukee, WI 53226
T: 414-456-8213
mdunn@mcw.edu

PCRM Online,
April 2006
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