Science, 26 Feb 2010 vol. 327 1076-1077
http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/full/327/5969/107(I'm not sure this link is open to nonsubscribers)
You might find this disturbing, thought-provoking, and moving, as I certainly did (my work includes animal research with mice). It's about how dogs and cats are supplied for animal research, and how the regulation of this has changed and continues to change. It includes some of the horror stories and heart-wrenching photos (like the pet who made it all the way to a university research center before some thoughtful person ran a scanner over it and found the chip). About 90,000 cats & dogs are used in U.S. research labs each year.
Some of the things this left me with:
- What a sad situation it is for an animal in this world, if you're alone with no one to care for you.
- What a lot has been accomplished, despite ongoing abuses, by people working for animal welfare, for no other reason than because they give a damn. Things used to be a whole lot worse.
- What a contribution these thousands of unwitting, unwilling animals have inadvertently made. Just think -- everybody you know who's had any kind of surgical procedure or biomedical device, you can bet it was worked out and perfected on nameless animals.
Scientists are probably all used to privately rolling our eyes at all the seemingly endless regulations and the hoops we have to jump through to work with animals, even mice, and maybe we all privately snicker sometimes at groups like PETA, but I'll bet most will acknowledge that it's good to have watchdogs.
I'm gonna fix that weak spot in the fence....