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Title: Which Shall Live—Men or Animals?
Author: Ernest Harold Baynes
Release Date: July 31, 2021 [eBook #65970]
Language: English
Produced by: Donald Cummings and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WHICH SHALL LIVE—MEN OR ANIMALS? ***
Which Shall Live—
Men or Animals?
Reprinted from Hygeia, October, 1923
Copyright, 1923
American Medical Association,
535 N. Dearborn St., Chicago
[1]
WHICH SHALL LIVE—MEN OR ANIMALS?
ERNEST HAROLD BAYNES
If the United States were threatened
with invasion by a foreign power,
even if we knew that the invasion
would be only temporary and that
only a few thousand of our citizens
would be killed, the whole country
would be aroused in an effort to prevent that
invasion. If necessary, millions of men would
be drafted and trained to meet the invaders
and billions of dollars would be expended to
protect those few thousand people from the
death that must otherwise overtake them. In
such a case, every real man and every real
woman in the country would be doing something
to insure the defeat of that invading
army. Yet such an army is like a box of tin
soldiers compared with armies that threaten
us all the time, but which cause scarcely an
extra beat of the nation’s pulse. I refer to the
armies of disease. The army of bubonic
plague alone, if permitted to effect a foothold
on our shores, might at any time ravage our
cities as it once ravaged the cities of Europe
and Asia, leaving scarcely enough living to
bury the dead. We read in DeFoe’s “History
of the Plague” in London in 1665 of “people
in the rage of their distemper or in the torment[2]
of their swellings, which were indeed
intolerable, running out of their own government,
raving and distracted, and often times
laying violent hands upon themselves, throwing
themselves out of windows, shooting themselves,
mothers murdering their own children
in their lunacy.” Indeed, we do not have to
go back so far to realize what the plague can
do. In 1905 in India alone there were
1,040,429 deaths from this one disease.
The Conquest of Bubonic Plague
In this country no layman loses any sleep
on account of bubonic plague. Is that because
it does not exist? Not at all. It comes to our
waters, even effects a landing sometimes. But
we have a small garrison of vigilant medical
men on our coasts watching day and night
for that enemy, ready to give him instant
combat if he comes. We sleep in peace
because we trust that garrison. Thirty years
ago we did not know what caused this terrible
plague, but in 1894 the germ (Bacillus pestis
bubonicae) was discovered. Even then it was
not known how the disease was carried or
what caused it to spread so rapidly—and
before it could be combated successfully, that
must be known. A series of experiments on
living animals, chiefly rats, guinea-pigs and
monkeys, yielded the desired information and
through these experiments we have been
delivered from this terrible scourge. It was
known that rats were subject to plague; consequently[3]
attempts were made to find out how
it was transmitted from one rat to another.
The idea that it might be carried by parasites
occurred to several investigators. Accordingly,
healthy rats were placed in cages close to
diseased rats; they remained perfectly well
until a few fleas were introduced. Then,
almost immediately, the hitherto healthy rats
were stricken with plague. Cages containing
healthy monkeys were suspended over cages
occupied by diseased and flea-infested rats.
At regular intervals the monkeys were lowered
nearer to the stricken rodents. The monkeys
were all right until they were brought within
jumping distance of a flea, when they at
once contracted the plague. These and other
experiments left no doubt that rat fleas were
the carriers among animals, and since rat fleas
also feed on man when their natural prey is
not available, it was an easy matter to show
that the plague is spread by means of rat
fleas. This led to a definite program for
checking the spread of the disease, by relentless
warfare on fleas and the rats that carried
them. The rats were trapped, their breeding
places destroyed, and diseased rats from
infested ports were prevented from entering
the country. For example, when it was found
that rats frequently come ashore along the
cables stretched between the ships and the
wharves, metal cones similar to those used to
prevent rodents from climbing into corn cribs
were placed on the cables. The fact that[4]
I wish to emphasize is that it is due to experiments
on living mammals that this black
death is no longer a terror to us.
Experimental Study of Health and Disease
Until the middle of the last century very
little had been done in the way of experimental
study of physiology and pathology.
Physicians depended almost entirely on bedside
observations. Some of these physicians
were wonderful men, and often their observations
were remarkably shrewd. But the
human body is a complex machine, the organs
are so interdependent, that in the presence of
any given set of symptoms and signs of disease,
it was almost impossible to be sure just
what caused them, and, consequently, what
was best to do for the patient. When the
experimental method was adopted disease
could be observed systematically, conditions
could be controlled, and the phenomena that
resulted could be studied intelligently because
the experimenter knew exactly what had produced
them. In such experiments mammals
are the animals chiefly used, because in most
respects they most nearly resemble man, himself
a mammal. Practically all the domestic
mammals have been used, horses, cattle, sheep,
goats, swine, dogs, cats, rabbits, guinea-pigs,
and rats and mice; monkeys are
also used. And all have made wonderful
contributions to medicine or surgery or both.
[5]
Types of Experiments on Animals
I
There are several classes of experiments.
Some are in the field of pure research, not
having for their object any immediate benefit
to man or animals. Experiments of this nature
were carried on some years ago in work on
bubonic plague among rodents in California.
It was discovered that ground squirrels have a
disease similar to plague and yet distinctly
different. By a long series of experiments it
was found that monkeys are susceptible to
this disease, and it was predicted that eventually
cases would be found in man. As a
result of this work a bacteriologist in Cincinnati
was able to identify the disease in persons
in his own vicinity. Another investigator
found it among persons in Utah, and showed
that it is carried from infected rabbits and
ground squirrels by biting insects. It also was
shown that the disease is widespread over
the United States. With this knowledge of
the means of transmission of the disease it
is comparatively easy to prevent the infection
of man.
II
Another class of experiments is carried on
by surgeons to develop dexterity before they
attempt operations on man. Such experiments
are usually carried out on dogs. The animals
are invariably under complete anesthesia and
usually they are killed by added ether at the
end of the experiment.
[6]
Does this dog look unhappy? Ten years ago
Buster had an operation performed on the stomach;
the results have been of aid in the study of digestion.
Buster has not suffered thereby, and she has saved
much suffering to others. She is receiving a visit
from the author.
Recently I attended the clinic of a throat
specialist in the east. I saw child after child
wheeled into the amphitheatre and relieved,
usually in a few moments, of foreign bodies
that they had sucked into the windpipe and that
a few years ago would in many cases have
caused death, either directly or as the result of
a dangerous operation. So dextrous is this man
that his little patients do not need any anesthetic.
After his work was done I had a talk
with him, and he told me that the technic of[7]
these operations had been worked out with
great care on dogs that were always under an
anesthetic. He also told me that by the use
of two dogs he had trained fifty other men to
do similar work.
This is Whitey, about eight months after the complete
removal of the parathyroid glands. These
glands are quite often partly and accidentally removed
during operations on the thyroid gland in man, with
alarming and sometimes fatal results. Following complete
removal of the parathyroid glands, carnivorous
animals, including man, die within from four to six
days. As a result of experimental work on this dog
and other animals, three effective curative measures
have been developed, which indefinitely preserve the
life of such animals in normal health. Two persons
are known to have been saved and several others have
been rendered free from symptoms as a result of this
study.
III
In the Civil War if a man was shot through
the bowels, he was doomed to death; the surgeons[8]
hardly dared to open the abdomen and
if they did they didn’t know how to join
the ends of the bowel so that it would not
leak. Of course the slightest leak meant infection
and death. Then came along an experimenter
who etherized about thirty dogs, shot
them through the bowels, and practiced joining
bowel ends until he could make a perfect
joint. It is safe to say that in the World War
the lives of thousands of men were saved as a
result of that series of experiments.
These children at the Anna Durand Hospital, Chicago,
have been saved from death from diphtheria by
the use of antitoxin. The boy in the center has a
squint as the result of his sickness.
Lockjaw, tetanus, chiefly a disease of war,
that threatened to take frightful toll of soldiers
wounded on the tetanus-infected battlefields of[9]
Europe, did little damage during the late war
because of antitetanus serum made from the
blood of immunized horses. Every wounded
man received an injection of this serum at the
earliest possible moment, and usually the
length of time that had intervened determined
whether the man would live or whether he
would die a most distressing and horrible
death.
The homes of this boy and girl have to thank
research workers and animals for the lives saved by
antitoxin for diphtheria. Without antitoxin, developed
by experimental work on animals, such children
would have had slim chances of recovery.
The antityphoid vaccine, also worked out on
mammals and tested on mammals, has practically
abolished typhoid fever in soldiers’
camps. It is estimated by the Surgeon[10]
General’s office that during the World War it
saved the lives of 60,000 men in the American
army alone.
On the roof garden of the Home for Destitute
Crippled Children, Chicago. Suppose one of these
victims of infantile paralysis were your child? Would
you hesitate to sacrifice under ether one or more animals
if through the knowledge gained the disease
could have been prevented, or your child could have
recovered without being crippled?
Benefits of Experimentation to Man
These are only a very few examples from
the long list of benefits that have accrued
to humanity through the use of living mammals
for experimental purposes. I must mention
only one more—the recent discovery of
a specific treatment for diabetes. Less than
two years ago I invited a little girl to go for[11]
a bird walk with me that I might give her
the pleasure of stroking and feeding a wild
bird in its nest. I was particularly eager that
she should enjoy that day, because both she
and I knew that she had not many days to
live. She was doomed to die of diabetes
within six months; as a matter of fact she died
in less than three months from the date of our
walk. I remember thinking that I would give
anything I possessed if I could by some
miracle restore that child to health. Today,
less than two years later, that miracle could
be performed, because Dr. F. G. Banting of
the University of Toronto, by a brilliant series[12]
of experiments on dogs, has completed investigations
begun on rabbits by Claude Bernard
seventy-five years ago. The story of this
wonderful discovery is long, but here are the
outstanding facts. It was found that when the
pancreas of a dog is removed, the animal
at once develops acute diabetes and usually
dies of that disease within three or four
weeks. Under the microscope the pancreas is
seen to be studded with countless little bodies,
known as the islands of Langerhans, after the
German scientist who discovered them. It was
found that these islands secrete a substance
quite different from that secreted by the rest
of the pancreas, and that it is the absence
of this substance, not the absence of the
pancreas itself, that causes diabetes. A method
was devised for obtaining an extract from
these islands of Langerhans, and it was found
that when this extract was injected into a
dog whose pancreas has been removed it did
not die, but got well and continued to be well
as long as it was given injections of this
extract. After these injections had been proved
to be safe by repeated experiments on dogs,
they were tried on human patients with startlingly
beneficial results. Even when the disease
is of long standing, when the patient has
reached the very last stage and is in the coma
that immediately precedes death, injections of
this extract, now known to the world as
insulin, will bring him out of the coma, snatch
him from the very jaws of death, and restore
him to health.
Pacific and Atlantic
Not man alone, but animals also have benefited by
experimental work. The best example of this is the
conquest of hydrophobia.
[13]
The False Stand of the Antivivisectionists
We have seen that all these great advances
in medicine and surgery have been made as
the result of experiments on living mammals,
and you will agree, I believe, that in all probability
further advances in these fields must be
brought about by the same means. This is the
opinion of practically all eminent physicians
and surgeons and veterinarians, and of all the
great scientists and educators in other fields—in
short, it is the opinion of all persons who
have vast responsibilities for the health of
men and of animals. The only persons who
are opposed to these reasonable experiments
are the antivivisectionists, who have no such
responsibilities. Would any sane person think
of going to the antivivisectionists for help if
there were an epidemic of smallpox or diphtheria,
or if there were an outbreak of hog
cholera or of blackleg in cattle? We don’t go
to them because they know nothing about such
matters. Yet they boldly contradict all competent
authorities and tell us that experiments
on animals are useless, that they have never
accomplished anything. The antivivisection
societies are composed largely of well disposed
but woefully misinformed persons. And those
who are responsible for the misinformation
are the leaders of the antivivisectionists. I
have been studying these leaders for some
years, and I may say, without any danger of
my statements being disproved, that among
them may be found many of the most dangerous[14]
of the criminal insane to be found in this
country today—and I have recently visited
some of our largest penitentiaries and asylums.
I have found some of these leaders of the
antivivisection movement to be guilty of falsehood,
slander, libel, perjury, forgery, and
attempted bribery. Under false pretenses they
obtain money from weakminded and unthinking
people and, with this money, they wilfully
and perennially attempt not only to prevent
the advance of medicine and surgery, but
also to break down the bulwarks of preventive
medicine by teaching contempt of vaccination
and of the use of antitoxins.
Few of the criminals in our jails are
responsible for the deaths of more than a
small number of persons; few of them have
attempted widespread destruction of life. But
it is the opinion of eminent physicians that
through the pernicious teachings of the antivivisection
leaders we shall in a few years
have epidemics that will destroy the lives of
many thousands of children. Unless we wish
for a return of the plagues and pestilences that
once devastated wide areas on this world
before the introduction of modern methods,
we should use every means in our power to
discourage these dangerous fanatics. I believe
that it is the duty of all good citizens who
belong to antivivisection societies to send in
their resignations at once, and to stand with
our government, our great physicians, surgeons,
veterinarians, agriculturalists, educators,[15]
and divines in approving and supporting
properly conducted animal experimentation
and sane humane education generally.
After the presentation of this paper by Mr. Baynes
before the American Society of Mammalogists, at its
fifth annual meeting, May 15 to 17, 1923, in the
Academy of Natural Sciences, Philadelphia, the Society
unanimously passed these resolutions:
Whereas, It is a fact known to all thinking people
that most of the great advances in medicine and surgery
have been made as a result of experiments on
living animals, especially mammals, and
Whereas, It is the belief of our eminent physicians,
surgeons, and veterinarians, and all others having
great responsibility for the health of human beings
and of animals, that future advances in these fields
will be made chiefly as the result of similar experiments,
and
Whereas, It is known that these experiments almost
invariably are conducted humanely and with a minimum
of discomfort to the animals used, and
Whereas, There is an organized movement being
carried on by certain misinformed and misguided
individuals who seek to prevent or seriously interfere
with such experiments, be it
Resolved, that we, members of the American Society
of Mammalogists, in annual convention assembled in
the city of Philadelphia, on the sixteenth day of May,
1923, are of opinion that, in the best interests of real
humanity, animal experimentation, including vivisection,
as practiced in our laboratories today, should
continue unhampered.
HYGEIA
A Journal of Individual and Community Health
The publication through
which the medical profession
of the United States
presents to the public
interesting, instructive
and authoritative articles
about health
Published Monthly
$3.00 the year—25 cents the copy
American Medical Association
535 North Dearborn Street - CHICAGO
Transcriber’s Note:
Archaic and variable spelling has been preserved.
*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WHICH SHALL LIVE—MEN OR ANIMALS? ***
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