PCRM Takes On Duke’s Animal Labs
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| Susanna Walsh, M.D. |
More than 80 percent of all U.S medical schools—including
Harvard, Yale, and Stanford—have abandoned the archaic practice
of using animals in undergraduate medical training in favor of cheaper
and more humane teaching methods. Duke University School of Medicine
is one of the few schools that have not yet made the switch. Its
medical students are required to cut open live pigs to learn and
practice surgical techniques—a gruesome, and unnecessary,
process.
That’s why PCRM flew physician member Susanna Walsh, M.D.,
to Durham, North Carolina in late October to present the alternatives
at a special luncheon seminar for Duke’s medical students.
A clinical assistant professor of obstetrics and gynecology at Boston
University School of Medicine, Dr. Walsh has long been opposed to
the use of animals in medical education. She shared her viewpoint
and presented the alternatives to a lecture room filled with interested
Duke students and staff.
Duke’s pig labs have been an ongoing source of controversy
at the university, the subject of several critical columns in the
school paper, and the focus of a hard-hitting PCRM ad campaign.
Although Dr. Walsh’s lecture was well-received by the students,
the administration still refuses to replace the animal labs.
We need your help to end these inhumane labs. Duke is the only
top 10 medical school in the country still killing animals in its
undergraduate medical training. Please write the dean and ask him
to replace the labs.
Dr. R. Sanders Williams
Dean
Duke University School of Medicine
Box 2927 Med Center
Durham, NC 27710
Phone: 919-684-2455
Fax: 919-684-0208
E-mail: r.s.williams@duke.edu
PCRM
Online, December 2004
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