News
Medical schools swap pigs for plastic 20/5/2008
Nature
Doctors used to try out their surgical skills on animals before being allowed to work on patients. Now just a handful of US medical schools still have animal labs.
This month sees the shutdown of the live-animal laboratory at Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine in Cleveland, Ohio. The lab is currently used to train medical students, allowing them to practise on anaesthetized pigs before attempting their first incision into humans. But the school, which has used live cats, dogs and ferrets in its surgery programme in the past, intends to stop using live animals at the end of this semester in favour of technologies such as virtual simulations.
It is the latest closure in a phase-out of animal labs across the United States: in 1994, live-animal experiments were on the curriculum in 77 of 125 medical schools; now it is thought that just eight use them. Several have stopped in the past year, including New York Medical College in Valhalla, which this year ended its practice of using live dogs to teach cardiovascular physiology to first-year students. And the trend is being played out across the globe (see 'All around the world').
Cost is undoubtedly a factor, it is expensive to maintain animals and to employ veterinary staff. But schools such as Case Western and New York Medical College have said that the decision to eliminate live-animal experiments was based mainly on improvements in alternatives. The New York school now uses echocardiography on volunteer students and simulators that mimic cardiac arrest or a drug's action, for example.
Simulation has developed hugely over the past decade. It is a lot more than a couple of mannequins, says Bruce Jarrell, vice dean of research at the University of Maryland School of Medicine in Baltimore, which a little over a year ago opened its surgery simulation and technology centre. Students practise using surgical instruments to lift coils of rope viewed over a monitor, much as intestines are lifted during bowel surgery. They use the controls during a simulated endoscopy while watching a realistic duodenum on a monitor. Nurses learn to intubate a mannequin that can be programmed to respond to administered 'drugs' with changes in heart rate and blood pressure. And minimally invasive surgery is tried by students using instruments that mimic those used in actual surgery to clip an 'artery'complete with 'blood'during a simulated gall-bladder removal, viewed on a computer screen.
The most advanced simulators have 'haptic feedback', which provides students with the sensation that their instruments are touching real tissue.
Advances such as these have made use of live animals for training in medical schools gratuitous, says John Pippin, a cardiologist based in Dallas, Texas. Pippin once used live dogs to study heart attacks but now works full-time as senior adviser for the media-savvy animal rights group Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine in Washington DC. The group has become a thorn in the side of deans and administrators in the 6% of US institutes that continue to use live animals to train future doctors. Heading their list is Johns Hopkins School of Medicine in Baltimore, Maryland, which is consistently rated in the top few schools in the country and unapologetically uses live animals.
Hopkins is the only top school that still uses animals in the medical school curriculum for any purpose, Pippin says. It is on an island. He was one of seven doctors attending a demonstration outside Johns Hopkins hospital in March protesting against the use of live pigs.
Jonathan Lissauer, a doctor who recently trained at Johns Hopkins, concedes the argument for animal use in medical research and advanced surgical training. He says that sometimes they were used as just a diversion for people who won't be using those skills at all. I think then you cross the territory from appropriate medical education to something worse than that, he says. There was no medical utility in having pigs die so that people going into psychiatry could play around.
From a purely academic perspective, he adds, I thought there were substantial differences between human tissues and pig tissues a lot of textural differences and that the practising wasn't overly useful because of that.
But Johns Hopkins' director of surgery, Julie Freischlag, makes no apologies for her programme's use of roughly 50 pigs and US$75,000 a year. She argues that the two days students spend in the pig lab are important in helping them decide if they are drawn to a surgical specialty. It also trains doctors who won't become surgeons but still need to know how to start intravenous lines and work with sutures.
The first time our graduates stitch you up in the emergency room as interns, they will have already done that on live tissue before, Freischlag says. They will be safer and better. I think most of us would hope they have actually done that on someone or something else before us.
In the pig lab, students are taught how to take out the kidneys, part of the stomach, part of the liver, the gall bladder and the spleen. They learn how to operate on a lung and how to repair organs injured by trauma. They practise tying off arteries. They learn to control bleeding, handle tissues gently and finish the operation with the incision looking appropriate.
A veterinary assistant and veterinarian attend the lab; the latter anaesthetizes and euthanizes the animals, which are purchased from contractors.
The activist group Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine campaigned against the use of pigs at Johns Hopkins Medical School.K. Freischlag says that the lab is a totally elective part of the surgery rotation, it is not graded, and students can opt out. She says that no student has opted out of the lab in advance in the five years she has been in her job. One person did decide they didn't like it when they got into it and then opted out.
Lissauer, however, claims that when he participated in the pig lab two years ago, students who didn't feel comfortable taking part in an animal lab felt pressured to do so...
Freischlag says that no amount of book learning, lectures or computer simulation can substitute for the experience of working with living tissue, and the unpredictability and bloodiness of real surgery. Controlling bleeding is a priority in surgery, not least because excess blood obscures the surgeon's vision. It is really a contact sport, Freischlag says.
Others agree that there is value in schools training doctors-to-be on live animals. More and more institutions are opting out and I don't think that there has been an adequate assessment of the educational impact, because it is very difficult to do, says Alice Ra'anan, the director of science policy at the American Physiological Society in Bethesda, Maryland, which supports the use of animal labs. How do you do a controlled experiment of what the impact is as medicine evolves?
Larry Laughlin, the dean of medicine at the Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences in Bethesda, Maryland, which uses roughly 75 pigs a year to teach medical students physiology and surgery, says: I'm not troubled if 10 or 100 other medical schools do not use animals. My focus is on what's best for our students, based on the educational professionals who advise me. A committee is in the process of reviewing his institution's use of animals and is expected to report in September.
Laughlin points out that US law requires that animal labs are approved by ethics committees, which must be persuaded that there is a compelling justification. Thousands of times more pigs are slaughtered and have worse lives and suffer worse demises in Iowa every day than we do in a year, says Laughlin, who grew up on a livestock farm in the midwest. Therefore it is hard for me to rationalize the intense concern.
One third-year medical student at Laughlin's institute, whom school
officials insisted remain anonymous, says: We have our simulation centre down the road where we learn how human bodies are supposed to react. But in our pig lab we have the opportunity to see how life actually reacts. And having experienced both, he contends that the pig lab has made him and his colleagues better surgeons-to-be than the fourth-year students from other medical schools that he encounters during their visiting, surgical electives. We are a lot better prepared for what goes on in an operating room. To me,
it is a real shortfall of their education, he says.
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HSUS Educational Memorial Program Summer Stipend 20/5/2008
The Humane Society of the United States (HSUS) is pleased to announce the availability of a $1500 stipend to be awarded to a one or more veterinary student to use part of summer, 2008 to prepare a formal proposal to establish an Educational Memorial Program at her/his veterinary college.
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New website with visualized experiments! 28/3/2008
COMPMED
The website JJOVE, Journal of Visualized Experiments, contains many useful videos and techniques, such as rat blood collection from the cardiac and saphenous routes. This website is relatively new but ever expanding.
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InterNICHE announces the 2008 Humane Education Award 6/2/2008
InterNICHE announces the 2008 Humane Education Award to support ethical and effective life science education and training.
The Award is a grant program to enhance biological science, medical and veterinary medical education and training.
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Alternatives Research Grant Program 1/12/2006
The Alternatives Research & Development Foundation, a leader in the funding and promotion of alternatives to the use of laboratory animals in research, testing, and education, announces that it is currently soliciting research proposals to its Alternatives Research Grant Program.
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E-learning helps save thousands of animals each year 27/11/2006
Hundreds of thousands of animals are saved each year from use in education thanks to computer simulations created by Professor of e-learning at Edinburgh University, David Dewhurst.
The development of his software programs has been funded by the Lord Dowding Fund for the past 20 years as his computer programmes replace the use of animals in university science teaching.
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Education and 3Rs: an Italian experience in veterinary toxicology 27/10/2006
Education and 3Rs: an Italian experience in veterinary
toxicology
F. CALONI
Department of Veterinary Sciences and Technologies for Food Safety,
University of Milan, Milan, Italy
INTRODUCTION
Practical education in anatomy, physiology, and surgery dates
from the time of Leonardo da Vinci (1452–1519) and from that
time animals became not only objects of study but models for
human investigation.
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Conference presentations on EURCA 5/10/2006At the 1st International Conference on Higher Education in Pharmaceutical Sciences Barcelona, which will be held from June 28 until 30, eurca's Spanish National contact, Dr. Pilar Vinardell will give a presentation on eurca.
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Breaking Old School Habits - Seven ways to bring biology class back to life 24/8/2006The US Animal Welfare Institute's AWI Quarterly now features an interesting article on how to revive biology class without the use of (living) animals. Seven suggestions are given, based on interviews with a high school biology teacher, an ethologist, a bioethicist, a director of a humane education organization and several college professors.
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eurca's Prof.Dr. David Dewhurst to receive Doerenkamp-Zbinden Award 2006!!! 24/3/2006
The Foundation Board of the Doerenkamp-Zbinden Foundation has unanimously decided to bestow the Doerenkamp-Zbinden Prize 2006 on Professor Dr. David Dewhurst from the University of Edinburgh.
David Dewhurst receives the Prize for his outstanding contributions to the replacement of animals in teaching of physiology and pharmacology.
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Student Essay Contest on “The Use of Animals in Veterinary Medical Education” 20/2/2006
The Society for Veterinary Medical Ethics (SVME) is dedicated to increasing dialogue and understanding of ethical values and issues facing the veterinary profession. In order to foster and encourage future veterinarians to develop their interest and understanding of veterinary ethics, the SVME sponsors an annual essay contest.
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NIH requests information on care of laboratory animals 23/1/2006
The National Institutes of Health is exploring the need to update its Guide for the Care and Use of Laboratory Animals.
The NIH first published the guide in 1963—with revisions in 1965, 1968, 1972, 1978, 1985, and 1996.
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New Animal Health and Welfare Tutorial Site Launched! 17/1/2006
With financial funding from the 3R Research Foundation Switzerland, DIGIRES (Digital Resources for Veterinary Trainers) of the University of Newcastle has produced a free tutorial website which aims to provide practical guidance in recognising signs of health and good welfare.
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2005 Humane Education Award for Alternatives in Education 14/10/2005
InterNICHE, supported by Proefdiervrij, announces the 2005 Humane Education Award for replacement of harmful animal use in higher education. 20,000 Euro (US$ 25,000) is available to be split between successful proposals.
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Medical students learn on 'breathing' robots 28/9/2005
Tue Sep 27, 2005 Reuters
MEXICO CITY (Reuters) - Faced with a growing number of medical students and few training hospitals, a Mexican university is turning to robotic patients to better train future doctors.
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ESEC'S Professional Development Course 26/9/2005
Learn about:
Experience an ACTUAL ALTERNATIVES LAB SETTING where you are both the student AND the teacher.
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CAAT seeks nominations for 3 awards 3/7/2005
CAAT has issued a call for nominations for three awards honoring
individuals and organizations for significant contributions to the field of alternatives. All three awards will be presented at the 5th World Congress on Alternatives and Animal Use in the Life Sciences in August 2005 in Berlin, Germany.
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NSTA Position Statement ‘Responsible Use of Live Animals and Dissection in the Science Classroom’ 22/6/2005
In June 2005, the latest Position Statement of the National Science Teachers Association on ‘the Responsible Use of Live Animals and Dissection in the Science Classroom’ was adopted by the NSTA Board of Directors.
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New report published on 'The ethics of Research involving Animals' by Nuffield Council on Bioethics 26/5/2005
Research involving animals has been the subject of intense debate in the UK and elsewhere. Too often this debate is presented in a polarised manner, differentiating only between those ‘for’ or those ‘against’ all animal research.
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HSUS Solicits Nominations for the 2005 Russell and Burch Award 24/3/2005
The Humane Society of the United States (HSUS) presents the Russell and Burch Award to scientists who have made outstanding contributions toward the advancement of alternative methods in the areas of biomedical research, testing, or higher education.
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New ALTERNATIVEDUCATION website launched 7/3/2005
www.ALTERNATIVEDUCATION.org is dedicated to the research and promotion of alternative methods to animal experimentation for humane education. This website was prepared by Společnost pro zvířata (the basic organisation of the Czech Union for Nature Conservation) in cooperation with the British animal protection organisation, RSPCA Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals), and is based on our 2002 - 2004 project called 'Alternatives in Undergraduate Education'.
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CAAT Offers Web-based 'Enhancing Humane Science' Course 11/12/2004
The Johns Hopkins Center for Alternatives to Animal Testing (CAAT) is offering a free online course on 'Enhancing Humane Science/Improving Animal Research', designed to provide a broad overview of diverse topics in the practice of and approaches to humane animal experimentation.
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Award-winning video 'Alternatives in Education' now available for free! 11/12/2004
The award-winning video 'Alternatives in Education' is now available for free download at the InterNICHE website. The 33-minute film features interviews with life science teachers and students, and samples classical experiments where conventional animal use has been replaced by a range of progressive, humane alternatives.
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Humane Education Award 2003 (Part II): Successful applicants chosen 12/11/2004
InterNICHE, the International Network for Humane Education, announced the successful applicants of the 2003 Humane Education Award (Part II). InterNICHE offered the 2003 Award to university teachers and others in India, with support from Dutch anti-vivisection organisation Proefdiervrij.
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2003 statistics on animal use in The Netherlands - animal use in education and training increased 14/9/2004
Although the number of animals used in education, testing and research in The Netherlands has declined considerably in 2003 to 620875 animals (compared to 724025 animals in 2002), the number of animals used in education and training increased significantly.
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Extra EURCA Newsletter 8 , 14 September ’04 14/9/2004
Extra EURCA Newsletter 8, 14 September ’04
Editorial
This is the last Newsletter written by me, as my contract with EURCA ends this month. Jan van der Valk will take over some of the practical responsibilities, including responding to relevant emails and maintaining the web site to some extent.
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Czech Repubic questionnaire about student experiences and attitudes to alternatives to animal use 28/7/2004
The Society for Animals in Czech Republic carried out an evaluation, using questionnaires, to investigate student experiences and attitudes to alternatives to animal use, in 6 Czech Faculties. Marketa Peckova, the Czech national InterNICHE contact, who also works for the Society for Animals in the Czech Republic, reports.
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EURCA sponsors Fetch, a dog training mannikin with First Aid wounds 9/6/2004
Rescue Critters! donate one of their products annually to a (non-)profit organisation, a school, fire department, animal regulations or to another type of business.
This year's donation is sponsored by EURCA and the item is "Fetch", a dog with first aid wounds, which normally costs $869.
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APSF/VAM anesthesia machine workbook now available in German 21/5/2004We are pleased to announce that chapter 1 of the Anesthesia Patient Safety Foundation (APSF - http://www.apsf.org) anesthesia machine workbook has been translated to German by Drs Haueser and Gebhardt and is available free of charge from the VAM web site http://www.
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EURCA Newsletter 7 (July 2004) 7/5/2004
Editorial
During the first half of 2004, the EURCA Project Team members and five National Contacts carried out outreach activities, including presentations at congresses. A project proposal for an ERASMUS Thematic Network (TN) was submitted in March.
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Computers needed for alternatives in higher education in Romania 29/4/2004
Does your University has old computers leftover, which are no longer in use? You can send them to Romania, where Prof Mungiu is establishing alternatives courses in teaching. There are only limited resources in Romania, but the will to offer humane alternatives in education is strong.
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EURCA negotiates discount deals with major alternatives publishers 28/4/2004
PRESS RELEASE
EURCA negotiates discount deals with major alternatives publishers
The European Resource Centre for Alternatives in Higher Education (EURCA: www.eurca.
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Teaching Materials and Methods presentations at the German Physiology meeting 22/4/2004
Deutsche Physiologische Gesellschaft
Handling Human Samples Is Worth the Risk 15/4/2004
The Scientist
test 8/4/2004
test
Address change EURCA in the Netherlands 8/4/2004
Please notice an address change of the Dutch EURCA office, as of 9 August:
EURCA
Utrecht University
Faculty of Veterinary Medicine
Department of Animals, Science and Society / NCA
PO BOX 80166
3508 TD Utrecht
The Netherlands
The new visiting address will be:
Yalelaan 2
3584 CM Utrecht
The Netherlands
Phone and fax numbers will remain the same.
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Address change EURCA in the Netherlands 8/4/2004
Please notice address change of the Dutch EURCA office, as of 9 August:
EURCA
Utrecht University
Faculty of Veterinary Medicine
Department of Animals, Science and Society / NCA
PO BOX 80166
3508 TD Utrecht
The Netherlands
The new visiting address will be:
Yalelaan 2
3584 CM Utrecht
The Netherlands
Phone and fax numbers will remain the same.
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Airway device tutorials added to VAM web site 6/3/2004
Virtual Anesthesia Machine
Evaluation of “Muscle Control” by Pharmacy students, The Netherlands 19/2/2004
In 2001, when the program “Muscle Control” was not finished yet, the key question of the program was evaluated by students, after they completed the program in the classroom. The key question in the program was “How is the required muscular strength adjusted and controlled, and by which physiological and morphological features is this directed?” (using skeletal and cardiac muscles as examples).
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EURCA sponsors "Fetch", a dog training mannikin with First Aid wounds 9/2/2004
Rescue Critters! brand donate one of their products annually to a (non-)profit organisation, a school, fire department, animal regulations or to another type of business.
This year's donation is sponsored by EURCA and the item is "Fetch", a dog with first aid wounds, which normally costs $869.
Read more
EURCA sponsors "Fetch", a dog training mannikin with First Aid wounds 9/2/2004Rescue Critters! brand donate one of their products annually to a (non-)profit organisation, a school, fire department or Animal Regulations or other type of business.
This year's donation is sponsored by EURCA.
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EURCA Newsflash 6 (January 2004) 4/2/2004
EURCA Newsflash 6 (January 2004)
Editorial
This is the first Newsflash of 2004. During the second semester of 2003, the EURCA Project Team members carried out a number of outreach activities, including congresses.
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Password needed for VAM web site 30/10/2003
VAM users mailing list (12,786 registered users): Announcement #13
Virtual Anesthesia Machine: http://www.anest.ufl.edu/vam
On Saturday November 1, 2003 between 12.00 noon and 3.00 pm Eastern Standard Time, we will go live with a redesigned VAM web site that will require a username and password to access the VAM simulation and workbook which will both remain free.
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New topic on the EURCA Discussion Board 12/10/2003
New reviews, outreach activities and EURCA National Contacts Meeting 9/10/2003
Reviews
Over the last couple of months, EURCA added new reviews, written by experts in the field, to the alternatives database. They are:
SimPatch;
Respiration Pharmacology and
Critical Care Fluffy
If anyone is using one of the models in our database and would like to comment or write a review and earn 150 euros, please let us know.
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'No Harm' Approach to Veterinary Medicine 10/8/2003
Los Angeles Times
October 7, 2003
LOS ANGELES
Students at a new veterinary college are learning their profession by practicing on animals that have died naturally.
By Steve Hymon, Times Staff Writer
Thirty students, standing around several stainless steel tables, are poking at dead dogs with scalpels. It's a scene that would likely raise the hackles of most dog owners — or prompt them to hide under a bed.
But these students, members of the first class at Western University's new veterinary school in Pomona, actually are practicing what the school calls "no harm" medicine. They are part of what school leaders say is a revolution in the way that veterinary medicine is taught and practiced in the United States.
At many schools, it's common practice to buy live dogs and cats from pounds or biomedical firms, then have students operate on them and later euthanize them. But these kinds of surgeries won't occur at Western, which has pledged to use donated animals only — those that have already died of natural causes or been put to sleep because of illness or old age.
"I don't know that I could dissect an animal knowing that it was killed for that purpose," said Rebecca Merlo, 23, of San Diego as she tries to find the shoulder joint of the dog she's working on. "I'm glad I don't have to be a part of that."
Lecturing, too, has been abolished at Western; it's considered too boring and ineffective. Nor is there a veterinary hospital on campus. Students instead will hone their diagnostic and treatment skills in courses where they are presented with theoretical case studies — such as a dog with a tricky shoulder. Later, they will get much of their training alongside real vets in clinics throughout Southern California.
"I think that most veterinary schools bristle at the words 'animal rights' because they perceive it as a bunch of wild-eyed lunatics freeing animals and burning down buildings," said Shirley Johnston, the dean of Western's veterinary school. "I know that our job is to educate students. But we think we should stand for this."
The school, which opened in August, is the only one in the state besides UC Davis. It adds some distinctive touches. Several days before the students began dissecting their dogs, for example, a ceremony was held in which the dogs' owners told students about their deceased pets' lives, even showing them videos.
"Other vet programs and labs that I toured, you're being educated with tools that are just perceived as meat," said Brian Van Horn, 29, a student from Porterville. "Here we actually know the names of our cadavers. We get information about the lives they led."
Some veterinarians applaud the school's approach.
"I know people who have literally been waiting for years for Western to open," said Linnaea Stull, a veterinarian in Atascadero on the Central Coast.
In 1999, Stull helped lead a student revolt at the University of Illinois. Veterinary students had alleged that the school was asking them to kill animals for no good reason — sometimes to see how an infection destroyed an animal's organs.
Other animal doctors wonder whether pet owners will muster the emotional strength to donate animals to the school for hands-on dissections. They also wonder whether the lack of operations on live animals at the school will deprive students of surgical experience.
"It's certainly a different flavor" at Western, said Jack Walther, president of the American Veterinary Medical Assn. "From my own personal perspective, there is a certain necessity to doing some procedures on a warm body, if you will. It's just the reality of learning medicine."
There are an estimated 61.9 million dogs, 68.9 million cats, 10.1 million pet birds and 5.1 million horses in the U.S., and millions more farm, zoo and research animals, according to the veterinarians' organization.
Although the number of pets has increased in the U.S. in recent years, the number of veterinarians has not. Most of the nation's veterinary programs were established in the late 1800s or early 1900s at large agricultural schools, such as Texas A&M, Illinois, Minnesota, Washington State and UC Davis. In those days, most veterinarians were men treating farm animals.
These days, most veterinarians-in-training are not men; 73 of the 86 students in Western's first class are women. And few universities are willing to found veterinary schools, which are expensive to operate, when they are strapped for funds to run existing programs.
Including Western, there are 28 veterinary colleges in the U.S., not enough to meet demand. Recent statistics from the American Medical Assn. and the Assn. of American Veterinary Medical Colleges suggest that it is now harder to get into veterinary school than medical school.
In the past, ethics was an important part of a veterinarian's education, but hardly at the top of the list. That has changed markedly, because most students who go to the agricultural schools end up in cities, caring for small pets — and because urban pet owners sometimes see their animals as having the same rights as humans.
When I was a student at Washington State, I took a junior surgery course. Every week we would anesthetize a dog and do a specified surgical procedure," Johnston said, recalling her days as a student in the early 1970s. "We might break the femur, then pin it, or resect a loop of intestine or spay it. Then we might wake the dog up and do something different. At the end of the semester we would put it to sleep.
"It would never have occurred to me then that I shouldn't do this. I'm ashamed to tell you I didn't question it."
By the time Johnston took the job at Western in 1998, when the veterinary school was in the planning stage, she had decided not just to question it — but to change it. She created the school's "reverence for life" program and decided it would be a major part of the school's marketing effort to new students.
On a tour of the school, Johnston enters a classroom and points out a board with pegs in it. Next to the board is a box with a hole in it large enough to accommodate a human arm.
Johnston said that when she was a student, she and her peers would line up behind a cow and wait their turn to feel the cow's ovaries. At Western, students won't get near a cow until after they have lined up and felt the pegs — stand-ins for ovaries.
"Students in this day and age are much more compassionate than maybe they were years ago," said Bennie Osburn, the dean of the School of Veterinary Medicine at UC Davis. "The students are wanting to assist in helping animals in every way possible. This is a trend that has been taking place, but I would say that most schools have not made as large a comment about it as Western has."
Gini Barrett is Western's resident ethicist — but she is neither a veterinarian nor a scientist. She grew up on a 40,000-acre ranch in Kansas. She has branded cattle, watched as cowboys castrated bulls and revived calves half-frozen to death in blizzards.
But at the age of 32, she rescued a baby mouse, tiny and hairless, that had become separated from its mother in a barn. She raised it on a bottle, and it got her thinking: "If this, the least of creatures, is so precious, what about the rest of them?"
Barrett is a longtime lobbyist for the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers. Her interest in animals led her to a job with the American Humane Assn., and from there, to her post at Western University. She teaches a mandatory two-year ethics course.
It goes well beyond the traditional questions of when a pet should be put to sleep, or whether it's appropriate for vets to advertise. One of the topics she considers most pressing, for example, is how animals are cared for on farms. Much of today's animal rights movement focuses on intensive livestock and poultry production and the cramped conditions that some animals are forced to live in.
If Western's students decide to work in agriculture, she wants them to understand all sides of these issues. She doesn't believe farmers will listen to animal rights activists, but they will probably listen to a veterinarian.
"I want veterinarians to feel empowered," Barrett said. "The silent veterinarian is not what I want."
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EURCA Newsflash 5 August 2003 8/6/2003
Editorial
Welcome to our summer edition of the EURCA Newsflash. The first half of 2003 has been quiet to some extent and therefore the Newsflash was not published in April. In March and April, the EURCA web site has been unavailable for almost two months due to problems with our host domain name server.
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Book review From Guinea Pig to Computer Mouse 28/5/2003
Book review ‘from guinea pig to computer mouse: alternative methods for a progressive, humane education’
By Nick Jukes and Mihnea Chiuia
InterNICHE, Leicester, England, 2003
544 pp.
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Domain name recovered and more images in the database 23/4/2003
We are happy to announce the recovery of the EURCA domain name www.eurca.org and being back up online with our original URL again.
Other positive news includes the number of images that has been attached to the records in the alternatives database.
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New reviews, outreach activities and EURCA National Contacts Meeting 10/3/2003
Reviews
Over the last couple of months, EURCA added new reviews, written by experts in the field, to the alternatives database. They are:
SimPatch;
Respiration Pharmacology and
Critical Care Fluffy
If anyone is using one of the models in our database and would like to comment or write a review and earn 150 euros, please let us know.
Read more
EURCA Newsflash January 2003 29/1/2003
EURCA Newsflash 4
January 29, 2003
Welcome to the fourth (winter edition) of the EURCA Newsflash. This issue contains a short update on our alternatives reviews programme, plans for 2003 and a list of forthcoming events.
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Facts and figures regarding animal experiments in the Netherlands 4/12/2002
There is news regarding the numbers of animal experiments in the Netherlands over 2001. There's a brand new report on the statistics of animal use, by the Dutch ministery of Health. It is up online, but in Dutch at
http://www.
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Newsflash September 2002 25/9/2002
EURCA Newsflash 3
September 25, 2002
The third (autumn edition) of the EURCA Newsflash contains a report on recent congresses, a description of a NEW feature on the web site, and details of new reviews and ongoing developments.
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Educational Resources Award 11/8/2002
Educational Resources Award
In April we asked teachers to submit teaching support materials for the Educational Resources Award. Unfortunately, at this time none have been received and we have decided to extend the final submission date until 11th December 2002.
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EURCA Educational award 11/7/2002
In April we asked teachers to submit teaching support materials for the Educational Resources Award. Unfortunately, at this time none have been received and we have decided to extend the final submission date until 11th November 2002.
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EURCA Educational award 11/7/2002
In April we asked teachers to submit teaching support materials for the Educational Resources Award. Unfortunately, at this time none have been received and we have decided to extend the final submission date until 11th November 2002.
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Answers and questions with regard to training methods employed for teaching surgeons endoscopic surgery 16/5/2002
Summary of responses received from a compmed post:
"I would like to hear from those of you with affiliations with teaching hospitals regarding the training methods employed for teaching surgeons endoscopic surgery.
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Background information on the 3R's 25/4/2002
Although most people in the field of animal use and alternatives, know about the concept of the three R’s (“replacement”, “reduction” and “refinement”), not everyone new to the field is familiar with these definitions.
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Veterinary anatomy images 25/4/2002
Veterinary anatomy faculty at the University of Minnesota
This website: http://vanat.cvm.umn.edu/WebSites.html shows high quality veterinary anatomy images and background information. Check them out.
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Hopkins Student Wins Fellowship for Human Cell Research 10/9/2001
Altweb
A Johns Hopkins University graduate student has received the Lasker Graduate Fellowship Award to support an innovative approach to lead research.
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Stony Brook University and Saint Louis University End Animal Labs 24/9/2007
PCRM Letters, september 2007
Two more medical schools have stopped using live animal labs in medical education. Stony Brook University Health Sciences Center School of Medicine in New York and Saint Louis University School of Medicine join eight others that...
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Second Newsflash 25/4/2002
EURCA Newsflash 2
Dear all,
This short spring edition of the EURCA Newsflash contains details of new reviews, brief workshop reports and an announcement about a new Educational Resources Award.
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Background information on the 3R's 30/1/2002
For those new to the site or new to the area of alternatives to animal use, here is a brief overview on the three R's, replacement, reduction and refinement. A more extensive article on the use of animals in education and alternatives will be due in March.
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First edition of the EURCA Newsflash 28/1/2002
Dear users of alternatives and other interested readers,
This is the first edition of the EURCA Newsflash, intended to inform you about
project developments. We hope to produce a Newsflash to keep you updated each
quarter.
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