Author Topic: NIH defends monkey experiments  (Read 621 times)

hubag bohol

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NIH defends monkey experiments
« on: June 18, 2015, 04:03:36 PM »
Director Francis Collins says the agency has changed how it conducts controversial studies, but argues the work is necessary.

Sara Reardon
28 January 2015



NIH/PETA
Researchers at the US National Institutes of Health are studying the effects of stress on infant macaques.

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hubag bohol

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Re: NIH defends monkey experiments
« Reply #1 on: June 18, 2015, 04:48:59 PM »
The US National Institutes of Health (NIH) has modified the way a controversial lab studies stress in monkeys in response to criticism by animal-rights activists and members of Congress who say that the research is inhumane.

At issue are experiments led by Stephen Suomi, a psychologist at the US National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD) in Poolesville, Maryland. Suomi’s lab studies how removing newborn rhesus macaques from their mothers affects biological processes such as brain activity and gene expression, and behaviours such as alcohol consumption in the infants. He has performed similar experiments for about three decades, and has received roughly US$30 million over the past seven years for the work, according to the activist group People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA), which is based in Norfolk, Virginia. The group obtained documents and videos from the NIH through a freedom-of-information request.

In September, PETA began posting ads in the subway station near the NIH’s campus in Bethesda, Maryland, and in newspapers, condemning the experiments as “cruel and archaic”, and arguing that they yielded results that were not relevant to human health. The group also posted videos of NIH monkey experiments on its website.

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