Animal Testing Should Stop

November 24, 2008 RSS Feed Print
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By Bonnie Erbe, Thomas Jefferson Street blog.

Accolades to Dr. Patricia Fox, an Albany surgeon who has the courage of her convictions and the temerity to take on the medical community in her hometown. She wrote a stunning op-ed in the Albany Times-Union, which I will share here in a moment.

Her point is that medical testing has been made obsolete by technology and should go the way of trephining. She opposes the use of pigs at the Albany Medical Center to train young doctors how to treat human trauma victims. But it has been widely proven that testing drugs for humans on animals is also ineffective. As Dr. John J. Pippin of the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine recently wrote:

The Food & Drug Administration tells us that 92% of drugs tested safe and effective in animals fail in human trials, even as the cost of bringing a drug to market has reached $1 billion and validated nonanimal alternatives are ignored. The blockbuster arthritis drug Vioxx from Merck killed more Americans than died in the Vietnam War, yet it was deemed safe in eight studies using six animal species. Many drugs have had severe and even lethal effects in people after demonstrating safety in animal tests. Conversely, safe and effective drugs such as aspirin, acetaminophen, and penicillin cause severe toxicities in animal tests.

Fox's op-ed is erudite and enlightening:

I know from firsthand experience what using animals in the classroom is like. When I was a plastic surgery resident at SUNY Downstate Medical School, it was common for schools to use live animals for a variety of purposes. In my senior year, I participated in a surgery course that used dogs. Each week, the dogs were subjected to a different operation, and like the pigs used in AMC's trauma training courses, the dogs were to be killed when the course ended.

Every day, to provide my dog with some exercise, I walked her past the guard at the front of the hospital and then returned her to a cage at the school. I grew to know her well. At the end of the course, I walked her past the guard one last time—and never returned to the lab. She was my companion for the next 12 years.

You can read the whole thing here.

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This is one reason why animal testing should stop............................British researchers blinded two domestic tabby kittens by sewing up their conjunctivae and eyelids. The kittens were then placed in a special holder and horseradish peroxidase was injected into their brains. The kittens were then killed.

Danielle of CA 5:58PM April 22, 2011

Animal research is vital to human existence. This testing enables doctors to find treatments and cures for various diseases.There are many regulatory acts protecting the animals in experiments, therefore proving that ending animal research all together would be a harsh blow to society.

Seanan 3:54PM May 16, 2010

Animal testing should be stop soon a drug or something can affect or thing like people other animals.

P.S. What if someone was testing drugs and things that could kill you how would you fell?

Im 11 so my future ahead of me and i dont want to see animals and people die all over the world.

Andre Jenkins of NY 11:35AM April 28, 2010

Bonnie Erbe

Bonnie Erbe

Bonnie Erbe is a contributing editor at U.S. News & World Report and hosts PBS's weekly news analysis program, To the Contrary with Bonnie Erbe. She also writes a weekly syndicated newspaper column for Scripps Howard News Service.

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