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Learning not to kill

New techniques mean that medical students can learn without killing animals. So why won't BU get with the program?
By SARAH MCNAUGHT  |  February 28, 2008

This article originally appeared in the February 27, 1998 issue of the Boston Phoenix.

At Boston University, spring is the time for first-year medical students to put their textbook learning to the test. Each week, students break up into groups of three and attend three-hour labs in which a professor straps a rabbit to a table, anesthetizes it, cuts it open, and shows the students how various medicinal injections affect the animal’s heart rate and blood pressure. When the lab is over, the animals are killed.

This type of lab has been offered at BU since 1970; this year, 120 of the 200 first-year students participated in the optional experiments. What the students are supposed to walk away with is a clearer perception of the way a human’s organs might function under the influence of medications like dopamine and epinephrine. “It’s all for the sake of science,” says Dr. Benjamin Kaminer, chairman of the medical school’s physiology department.

But some students leave the room feeling that they have done a cruel and unnecessary thing. And although the labs are not required (those who opt out can “learn what they need to know from books and drawings,” says Kaminer), some students say that their peers and professors seem to expect them to take part.

“I had a rabbit as a pet when I was young, and he didn’t look as healthy as the ones I see cut open and killed in the animal labs,” says one second-year medical student, who says he attended the labs last year because he saw professors become hostile to students who asked what the alternatives were.

Until about a decade and a half ago, this kind of experimentation on live, healthy animals — usually dogs, pigs, or rabbits — was just part of learning to be a doctor. But today, medical schools are finding ways to avoid these senseless deaths. Many students are learning in new ways: by observing real-life operations on humans, for example, and by using sophisticated interactive computer programs. In Massachusetts, according to the Washington-based Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine (PCRM), only one medical school has refused to adopt the new techniques: Boston University’s.

“Live-animal labs are a relic of the past that sends a message to medical students that lives are disposable,” says Dr. Neal Barnard, founder and president of PCRM. The group, a nonprofit organization founded in 1985, has sent Kaminer an instructional video on alternative teaching techniques and has taken out an ad in BU’s newspaper, the Daily Free Press, calling for “medical education without the pitter-patter of little feet.”

But Kaminer says the animal labs are crucial because they put what students learn from textbooks and drawings in perspective — and allow would-be doctors to observe the organs functioning as a unified system.

“When you limit a student’s education to particular procedures, such as cardiac bypasses, the student is not getting a proper grasp of what reality is in the world of medicine,” says Kaminer. “No one can tell me that 300 years of scientific development using animals is unproductive.”

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