A Survey to Understand Public Opinion Regarding Animal Use in Medical Training

被引:2
|
作者
Merkley, Ryan [1 ]
Pippin, John J. [1 ]
Joffe, Ari R. [2 ,3 ]
机构
[1] Physicians Comm Responsible Med, Washington, DC USA
[2] Univ Alberta, Dept Pediat, Div Crit Care, Edmonton, AB, Canada
[3] Univ Alberta, John Dossetor Hlth Eth Ctr, Edmonton, AB, Canada
来源
ATLA-ALTERNATIVES TO LABORATORY ANIMALS | 2018年 / 46卷 / 03期
关键词
animal experimentation; ethics; medical training; public opinion; survey;
D O I
10.1177/026119291804600308
中图分类号
R-3 [医学研究方法]; R3 [基础医学];
学科分类号
1001 ;
摘要
A random survey was performed by ORC International Telephone CARAVAN (R), on 24-27 March 2016, by trained interviewers. The aim of this survey was to gain further understanding of public perceptions in the United States of laboratory animal use, specifically for the purposes of medical training. Five statements were read in random order to the participants, who were then asked whether they agreed or disagreed with the statement. Survey responses were obtained from 1011 participants. For the combined statements: "If effective non-animal methods are available to train a) medical students and physicians, b) emergency physicians and paramedics, and c) paediatricians, those methods should be used instead of live animals", most respondents (82-83%) agreed. For the statement: "You want your doctor to be trained by using methods that replicate human anatomy instead of live animals", most respondents (84%) agreed. For the statement: "If effective non-animal methods are available, it is morally wrong or unethical to use live animals to train medical students, physicians and paramedics", 67% of respondents agreed. Responses were similar among the 15 pre-specified demographic subgroups. Given that effective non-animal training methods are readily available, the survey suggests that a substantial majority of the public wants the use of animals in medical training to cease.
引用
收藏
页码:133 / 143
页数:11
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] A survey on public opinion regarding financial incentives for oocyte donation in Brazil
    Espirito Santo, E.
    Oliveira, J. B. A.
    Petersen, C. G.
    Mauri, A. L.
    Baruffi, R. L. R.
    Franco, J. G., Jr.
    JORNAL BRASILEIRO DE REPRODUCAO ASSISTIDA, 2013, 17 (03): : 173 - 179
  • [2] A Survey of Public Opinion in the United States Regarding Uterine Transplantation
    Hariton, Eduardo
    Bortoletto, Pietro
    Goldman, Randi H.
    Farland, Leslie, V
    Ginsburg, Elizabeth S.
    Gargiulo, Antonio R.
    JOURNAL OF MINIMALLY INVASIVE GYNECOLOGY, 2018, 25 (06) : 980 - 985
  • [3] National survey of College Tutors in the UK regarding training in medical education
    Rashid, A.
    Doger, A.
    Gould, G.
    BRITISH JOURNAL OF ANAESTHESIA, 2008, 100 (01) : 42 - 44
  • [4] DO PUBLIC OPINION POLLS ACTUALLY PROVIDE A SURVEY OF PUBLIC OPINION?
    Subrt, J.
    SOTSIOLOGICHESKIE ISSLEDOVANIYA, 2018, (12): : 56 - 62
  • [5] Public opinion regarding economic and cultural globalization: evidence from a cross-national survey
    Edwards, Martin S.
    REVIEW OF INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY, 2006, 13 (04) : 587 - 608
  • [6] A Survey of Internet Public Opinion Mining
    Guo, Kaijie
    Shi, Liang
    Ye, Weilong
    Li, Xiang
    PROCEEDINGS OF 2014 IEEE INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON PROGRESS IN INFORMATICS AND COMPUTING (PIC), 2014, : 173 - 179
  • [7] Opinion survey of the Hong Kong general public regarding genomic science and technology and their ethical and social implications
    Hui, E.
    Chow, K.
    Wu, D.
    Liu, A.
    Li, Y.
    NEW GENETICS AND SOCIETY, 2009, 28 (04) : 381 - 400
  • [8] Public Opinion Regarding Globalisation: The Kernels of a 'European Spring' of Public Discontent?
    Balestrini, Pierre P.
    GLOBALIZATIONS, 2015, 12 (02) : 261 - 275
  • [9] Public opinion and awareness regarding probation in the Czech Republic
    Tomasek, Jan
    Hakova, Lucie
    Krulichova, Eva
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF PROBATION, 2022, 14 (02): : 87 - 108
  • [10] A Survey of Key Opinion Leaders to Support Curriculum Development in Advanced Medical Science Liaison Training
    Robert J. Moss
    Emily B. Smith
    George Anderson
    Vitalina Rozenfeld
    Christopher Evangelista
    Colleen Trahey
    Christine Venuti
    Edward J. Weiner
    Therapeutic Innovation & Regulatory Science, 2015, 49 : 45 - 49