| Winter
2005• Volume XIV, Number 1
Extreme Makeover: One Scientist’s Story
Chad B. Sandusky, Ph.D.
The
small classified ad in the Washington Post announcing a
PCRM job seemed to leap off the page to Chad Sandusky as he glanced
through the science jobs one sunny Sunday in August 2002. The respected
toxicologist had often felt a vague uneasiness about his work at
the Environmental Protection Agency and as a consultant for the
chemical industry—which often required ordering animal tests.
Here was his chance to do something about it.
After more than 30 years in a discipline based largely on animal
tests, the 59-year-old Duke and Emory alumnus has boldly redefined
himself as someone who cares deeply about the hundreds of millions
of animals used each year in animal experiments. Now the director
of toxicology and research for PCRM, Dr. Sandusky is working at
the national and international levels to eliminate the use of animals
in medical education, toxicity testing, and medical research. (See
“The Year in Review”
)
“Once I starting thinking outside the science-as-usual box,
I began to see that animal research isn’t just cruel—it’s
not good science, nor is it a wise use of resources,” says
Dr. Sandusky. “Animals are just not good models for humans.
I also have learned that animal tests have never actually been validated;
they’ve just evolved over the years, yet our government holds
cruelty-free alternative tests to impossible standards.”
Dr. Sandusky looks forward to PCRM expanding its advocacy role
into newly developing areas of science. “Years from now, when
we look back on this period in our culture, we will wonder why we
took so long to change,” he says. “It feels good to
be on the right side of history.”
Media
Center | Health | Research
| About PCRM | Catalog
| Join Us | Search
| Site Index | Home
The site does
not provide medical or legal advice. This Web site is for information purposes
only.
Full Disclaimer | Privacy Policy
|