MisterCornell
Banned
- Dec 30, 2004
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Originally posted by: Bigsm00th
Originally posted by: nakedfrog
Originally posted by: MisterCornell
I'm in medical school right now, and let me just say there is *no* dissection of live animals (or dead animals for that matter). It would be pretty outrageous if there was.
Also, the trend is away from the cadaver dissections. Many of the top schools (UCSF, UM) have done away with it, or will do away with it shortly.
Why? I would much rather a future doctor get his first experience with that sort of thing on someone who's already dead.
agreed
Are you in medical school? No.
20 years ago, the cadaver dissection used to last a year or two. Today, it lasts 12 weeks in most places. Some schools have done away with it, and just have prosections (previously dissected cadavers with tagged body parts). As someone who has been there, I can tell you that that is a lot better.
Most of the time people spend in the cadaver lab is tedioius work, removing skin, fat, and so forth. Before our anatomy exams, they would put tags identifying structures on each of the cadavers and we would wallk around the lab examining them, and that was the day the most significant learning took place.
Some people would not go to the anatomy lab for 3 weeks, and just go in on the day when the body parts were tagged (prosections), and they would do fine on the exams.
That's why some of the top medical schools are doing away with the dissections, because people don't really learn a whole lot during 95% of the time, most folks don't like it, and there are better ways to teach the same thing (e.g. prosections of cadavers prepared by professionals).
Also, I'd like to point out once again that in medical school people are not dissecting live dogs. I don't know where folks got that idea from. I do not see the educational value in that. There is definitely little to no educational value in that for high school students.
