Access

News


Nature Medicine 14, 112 (2008)
doi:10.1038/nm0208-112

Q & A: Frankie Trull

Genevive Bjorn1

  1. Maui, Hawaii


Attacks against researchers by animal rights extremists have steadily increased in recent years. More than 70 such attacks occured in 2006 alone, according to data collected by the Foundation for Biomedical Research, a Washington, DC–based nonprofit that aims to serve as the voice of scientific reason in the ongoing debate that surrounds animal research. Frankie Trull currently heads the foundation, which she established in 1981. She explains to Nature Medicine why she has devoted her career to improving the public understanding of the essential role of lab animals in medical research and discovery.


Nearly three decades ago, you established the Foundation for Biomedical Research and its sister organization, the National Association for Biomedical Research, which lobbies on behalf of scientists. What motivated you to do so?