Bill Frist medical school experiments controversy

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While he was a medical school student in the 1970s, Bill Frist (formerly a Republican U.S. Senator from Tennessee) performed medical experiments on shelter cats while researching the use of drugs on the mitral valve. By his own account, Frist improperly obtained these cats from Boston animal shelters, falsely telling shelter staff he was adopting the cats as pets.[1] In his 1989 book Transplant, Frist admitted that he killed these cats during medical experiments at Harvard Medical School, as part of what he claimed were his studies. [2][3]

In his book, Frist asserted that he succumbed to the pressure to succeed in a highly competitive medical school. Frist stated that he "treat[ed] them as pets for a few days" before he "cart[ed] them off to the lab to die." He went on to say, "And I was totally schizoid about the entire matter. By day, I was little Billy Frist, the boy who lived on Bowling Avenue in Nashville and had decided to become a doctor because of his gentle father and a dog named Scratchy. By night, I was Dr. William Harrison Frist, future cardiothoracic surgeon, who was not going to let a few sentiments about cute, furry little creatures stand in the way of his career. In short, I was going a little crazy." He went on to describe why he conducted animal experiments: "It can even be beautiful and thrilling work, as I discovered that day in the lab when I first saw the wonderful workings of a dog's heart . . . I spent days and nights on end in the lab, taking the hearts out of cats, dissecting each heart, suspending a strip of tiny muscle that attaches the mitral valve to the inner wall of the cat heart and recording the effects of various medicines I added to the bath surrounding the muscle." "I lost my supply of cats. I only had six weeks to complete my project before I resumed my clinical rotations. Desperate, obsessed with my work, I visited the various animal shelters in the Boston suburbs, collecting cats . . . it was a heinous and dishonest thing to do."

Senator Bill Frist
Senator Bill Frist

Frist's treatment of cats first became controversial in 1994, in his first Senate campaign, when the opposing camp in the Republican primary called him a cat-killer. The matter again created public controversy in 2002, after mention in a Boston Globe profile, published after his election as Senate majority leader.[4][5] People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA), which opposes scientific experimentation on animals that results in death or cruel treatment demanded that Frist atone by sponsoring legislation to protect animals from unnecessary suffering.[6] In response, Frist's office reaffirmed that he denounced the action, but made no promises about any animal protection legislation.

According to an American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (ASPCA) lawyer, Frist's action was "fraudulent and probably was illegal". Another ASPCA official stated it "probably would be considered cruel."[6] Massachusetts has a criminal statute prohibiting cruelty to animals.[7] Frist was never charged under this statute and his defenders have pointed out that until 1983 Massachusetts law permitted shelters to release animals for laboratory experiments, and some states continue to permit such activity today. Because the Boston area animal shelters in Frist's case did not release the animals to Frist knowing they would be used for experimentation (due to the manner in which he obtained the cats), these laws may not have applied to the facts presently in the public record about Frist's actions. However, the statute of limitations has passed.

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ William H. Frist, MD, Transplant : A Heart Surgeon's Account of the Life-and-Death Dramas of the New Medicine, Fawcett; Reprint edition (August 28, 1990), ISBN 0-449-21905-4
  2. ^ "The Price of Power", New York Times, 2003-05-11. 
  3. ^ Daschle, Beware: Young Dr. Frist Sliced Up Cats Ron Rosenbaum, New York Observer, January 8, 2003, (contains quotes and analysis of statements of Bill Frist in his book, Transplant)
  4. ^ Kranish, Michael. "First Responder", Boston Globe, 2002-10-27. 
  5. ^ "Kitty-killer label litters Frist resume for president", The Tennessean, 2006-06-12. 
  6. ^ a b "Frist asked to atone for killing cats", United Press International, 2002-12-31. 
  7. ^ Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 272, sec. 77

[edit] References

  • William H. Frist, MD, Transplant : A Heart Surgeon's Account of the Life-and-Death Dramas of the New Medicine, Fawcett; Reprint edition (August 28, 1990), ISBN 0-449-21905-4