Smith S J, Evans R M, Sullivan-Fowler M, Hendee W R
Department of Drugs, American Medical Association, Chicago, IL 60610.
Arch Intern Med. 1988 Aug;148(8):1849-53.
From the introduction of the "Gallinger-DC" bill in 1896 to the passage of the Laboratory Animal Welfare Act in 1966, organized medicine and the American physician have been active in promoting the humane and appropriate use of research animals and explaining to the public and legislators the importance of research using animals to medical progress. The role of organized medicine and science in events leading to passage of federal legislation is discussed. Past efforts of the American Medical Association and the American physician have been critical in numerous successful efforts at the local, state, and national level to prevent the passage of laws which restricted animal use for health research and impeded medical progress. This article demonstrates that current initiatives by physicians to preserve biomedical research are a reaffirmation of their traditional role.
从1896年“加林格 - 特区”法案的提出到1966年《实验动物福利法》的通过,有组织的医学团体和美国医生一直积极推动对实验动物的人道且恰当的使用,并向公众和立法者解释利用动物进行研究对医学进步的重要性。本文讨论了有组织的医学团体和科学界在促成联邦立法通过的一系列事件中所扮演的角色。美国医学协会和美国医生过去的努力,对于在地方、州和国家层面多次成功阻止那些限制将动物用于健康研究并阻碍医学进步的法律的通过起到了关键作用。本文表明,医生们目前为维护生物医学研究而采取的举措是对其传统角色的再次肯定。