Tuesday, October 5, 2010

Help End Military Trauma Training On Animals



Thousands of healthy animals are used by the military for trauma and chemical-casualty training exercises every year—even though superior non-animal alternatives are available. In the current training exercises, live pigs are shot, stabbed, and burned; live goats have their legs broken with bolt cutters and cut off with shears; and live monkeys are poisoned with harmful chemicals. These barbaric exercises are conducted on many military bases in the U.S. as well as on other bases around the world.



Now is your chance to help end the unnecessary suffering and deaths of animals used in trauma and chemical-casualty exercises. Please take a few minutes to read more about these cruel exercises and take action now.





Trauma Training 101


Every year, the U.S. Department of Defense (DoD) conducts trauma and chemical-casualty training exercises in which animals are used as "stand-ins" for wounded soldiers. Medical officers at military installations across the nation critically injure thousands of live animals before killing them. In trauma training exercises, live pigs are shot, stabbed, and set on fire and live goats have their legs broken with bolt cutters and cut off with shears. During chemical-casualty training exercises, live monkeys are poisoned with harmful chemicals. These animals are also often forced to suffer through hellish conditions as they are transported to facilities for this training.


The DoD is putting soldiers' lives at risk by using animals in these experiments. The anatomies and physiologies of pigs, goats, and monkeys are drastically different than those of humans; therefore, these animals will respond differently to treatments than humans would.

There are numerous non-animal training methods available, including rotations in civilian trauma centers; the Combat Trauma Patient Simulation system (CTPS); the Simulab Corporation's TraumaMan system; and Dr. Emad Aboud's "living" cadaver model, which Dr. Aboud has personally demonstrated for the Army.

Neither the Air Force Expeditionary Medical Skills Institute's Center for Sustainment of Trauma and Readiness Skills nor the Navy Trauma Training Center use animals for trauma training—more proof that it is not necessary to use animals in order to teach these treatment skills.

No animal model can adequately duplicate the anatomy and physiology of injuries inflicted upon the human body in war." —Michael P. Murphy, M.D., associate professor of surgery at Indiana University School of Medicine, veteran of Operation Iraqi Freedom (2004, 2007), and medical general counsel for Iraq War Veterans Organization

TAKE ACTION:

http://features.peta.org/TraumaTraining/101.asp

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