NIH Will Investigate “Cruelty 101” Course In Response to PCRM Petition
The
National Institutes of Health has announced it will investigate
the controversial Spinal Cord Injury Techniques Training Course
at Ohio State University in response to a PCRM complaint charging
animal welfare violations.
In a petition filed last year, PCRM charged OSU with ignoring federal
regulations requiring government-funded research institutions using
animals to “minimize pain and distress,” to “minimize
the numbers of animals used” and “to consider non-animal
alternatives.”
Nicknamed “Cruelty 101,” the course requires students
to surgically expose the spinal cords of mice and rats—a technique
known as laminectomy—and drop weights on them to simulate
human spinal cord injuries. Over the course of the three-week class,
hundreds of animals are subjected to additional surgeries, laboratory
procedures, and physically demanding behavioral exercises before
they are killed. The course is funded in part by NIH.
According to PCRM, OSU’s course is not only cruel, but pointless
given current spinal injury research using human neural cell lines,
impact studies on cadavers, and clinical treatments and trials.
Little-known protection under Public Health Service
Although rats and mice are not protected under the federal Animal
Welfare Act, all animals used in experiments are guaranteed some
measure of protection under provisions of the Public Health Service
(PHS) Policy on the Humane Care and Use of Laboratory Animals.
The next spinal cord injury class is scheduled for July 15-20,
2005. University officials have so far refused to meet with PCRM
and local activists to discuss their concerns about the course.
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PCRM Online, February
2005
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