ST. LOUIS -- Washington University in St. Louis said Monday it has stopped using sedated cats to train medical students to insert breathing tubes in babies' throats, effectively ending the practice in the U.S., according to a medical ethics group.
The university's School of Medicine said in a statement after a "significant investment" in its simulation center, it will provide neonatal intubation training using only mannequins and advanced simulators, effective immediately.
The school said improvements in simulators made the change possible. Cats at the university are being adopted by employees of the medical center.
"In the 25-plus years the university has relied on cats in teaching this procedure, none was harmed during training," the statement read.
The Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine, a medical ethics not-for-profit group, applauded the decision, saying the practice was cruel to animals and unnecessary for students.
The group said it was the last of the 198 U.S. pediatrics programs using cats.
"The best way to teach emergency airway intervention is on human-relevant training methods. I commend Washington University for switching to modern methods," said Dr. John Pippin, director of academic affairs for the Physicians Committee.
Washington University's use of cats has drawn criticism in recent years, with critics saying the animals suffer pain and injuries ranging from cracked teeth to punctured lungs.
Protests broke out in 2013 after an undercover video of the lab was released by People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals. The video shows a trainee putting tubes down the throat of a sedated cat, sometimes struggling to get it right.
But university officials have said the lab met federal Animal Welfare Act standards, including passing an inspection by the U.S. Department of Agriculture soon after the PETA video.
Other teaching labs have used simulators for years, but Washington University cited research indicating pediatric doctors in training succeed only in 20 percent to 35 percent of their initial attempts to intubate infants, justifying the need for animals in training.
The program previously used ferrets, too, but university spokeswoman Judy Martin said ferrets have not been used for many years.
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