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ANIMAL EXPERIMENTATION AND TUBERCULOSIS

JAMA. 1909;LII(14):1112-1113. doi:10.1001/jama.1909.02540400038007.
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The present general movement against tuberculosis, one of the most hopeful if not indeed the most promising of all the modern efforts for the temporal salvation of the human race, owes much to animal experimentation. This is ably set forth by Dr. E. L. Trudeau,1 who says, without any qualifications or reservations whatever, that "everything that has a direct bearing on the prevention of tuberculosis, everything that has changed mankind's attitude toward it from one of apathy and hopelessness when the infectious agent which produces tuberculosis was unknown and the disease was thought to be inherited and always fatal, to the growing hope of its ultimate conquest... we owe to animal experimentation." We quote his exact words because he speaks with authority and his words carry greater weight than those of almost any one else in this country on this subject.

It was animal experimentation that first showed that

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