“Cruel and unnecessary”: Two former military doctors urge marines to not practice trauma surgery on live animals

Associated Press reports that two former military doctors have asked the Marine Corps Base Hawaii commander to not operate on live animals as part of combat trauma training, calling the practice “cruel and unnecessary”:

Two former military doctors have asked Hawaii-based Marines not to allow medical personnel to operate on pigs and goats during combat trauma training this week.

The doctors wrote Marine Corps Base Hawaii commander Col. Jeffrey Woods on Thursday, asking that medics at his base use simulator suits that mimic the human body instead.

“While the purpose of (this) week’s course is to train those medical personnel to respond to battlefield injuries and prevent fatalities, the use of animals is cruel and unnecessary,” said the letter, signed by Dr. Douglas Bell and Dr. Robert Lucius.

The animals are made unconscious before the training. Then, according to the letter, training participants cut into the animals’ legs, slice open their throats and insert tubes and needles into their chests and abdomens. The animals are euthanized afterward.

Bell, who is a retired Ho­nolulu internist and was an Army doctor stationed in South Korea from 1956 to 1958, said it would be better to use simulators instead of needlessly sacrificing animals.

Bell is a member of the group Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine, a Washington, D.C.-based group that has been campaigning against the use of live animals in medical training. Lucius is a retired Marine lieutenant colonel and doctor in Pacific Grove, Calif.

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