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 Testing of Industrial Chemicals: Strategies that Save Animal

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vegan
Grand sage
Grand sage
vegan


Nombre de messages : 1483
Date d'inscription : 24/09/2011

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MessageSujet: Testing of Industrial Chemicals: Strategies that Save Animal   Testing of Industrial Chemicals: Strategies that Save Animal Icon_minitimeSam 23 Juin - 11:16

june the 3rd , 2012

Starting with the testimony of Neal Barnard, M.D., to Congress in 1999, PCRM has worked to prevent the deaths of animals in large testing programs such as the Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) High Production Volume Chemical Challenge Program (HPV Program), which gathered data on industrial chemicals produced or imported into the U.S. in excess of 1 million pounds. By working together with other animal protection scientists to evaluate testing plans, PCRM was able to save thousands of animals.

PCRM promotes the concept of “thoughtful toxicology”: Instead of doing a list of tests for each chemical, you examine all of the information available on a chemical and can very frequently decide that testing can be avoided. For example, if a chemical, because of its properties, will not be absorbed through the skin, animal tests that assess toxicity by skin exposure should not be conducted.

Over the course of the HPV program, PCRM helped assess hundreds of testing plans—and we won some big victories. PCRM scientists presented the principles behind these victories at scientific conferences in Seattle, San Diego, Austin, Washington, D.C., Berlin, and Tokyo, spreading them to other scientists worldwide. In the fall of 2008, the EPA plans to continue the program for new HPV chemicals and Medium Production Volume (MPV) chemicals, as the Chemical Assessment and Management Program (ChAMP). Earlier this year, PCRM sent comments to the EPA detailing additional animal protection principles EPA should adopt in this new program in order to save animal lives.

As a result of PCRM’s work, the American Chemistry Council has invited PCRM’s director of toxicology and research, Chad Sandusky, Ph.D., to participate in an expert panel. Dr. Sandusky and his team will assess each testing plan submitted to the panel by HPV and MPV manufacturers and suggest ways in which animal testing can be avoided or minimized while still protecting health and the environment.

For more information on PCRM’s work to stop animal testing of industrial chemicals and a historical perspective on the HPV program, see below. You can also read more about alternatives to animal testing here.

■PCRM Testimony Before Congress on Prioritizing Chemicals for Safety Determination. Nov. 17, 2009 (PDF).
■The Availability of HPV Chemical Data: A Comprehensive Report
■Testimony on High Production Volume Chemical Tests to the House Subcommittee on Energy and the Environment by Neal Barnard, M.D.
■Analysis of the HPV Challenge: Industry Violations and EPA Negligence
■"Strategies to Reduce Animal Testing in US EPA’s HPV Program" by Chad Sandusky, Ph.D., Megha Even, M.S., Kristie Stoick, M.P.H., Jessica Sandler, M.S.
■Abstract
■Full paper (PDF)
■"Systemic Testing by the Dermal Route Can Be Precluded by New Non-animal Percutaneous Absorption Strategies" by Kristie Stoick, M.P.H., Ken Nitschke, Ph.D., Chad Sandusky, Ph.D.
■Abstract
■Full Paper (PDF)
■PCRM Letter to EPA on ChAMP
■ChAMP Animal Welfare Guidance Developed by PCRM
■PCRM Shares Views with Society of Toxicology on Leading the Field of Toxicology Into the 21st Century
■PCRM scientists are constantly working to promote nonanimal toxicity testing methods. Recently, as members of the Society of Toxicology, Chad Sandusky, Ph.D., and Kristie Sullivan, M.P.H., shared their views with SOT President Kenneth Ramos, who will be responsible for leading the field of toxicology into the 21st century.
■PCRM Scientists and a PCRM Member ask CSPI President Michael Jacobson, Ph.D., to Learn How Carcinogenicity Testing Can Be Made More Human-Relevant, and More Humane
■The Center for Science in the Public Interest has a good track record of promoting healthful eating and good federal nutrition policy. Unfortunately, the organization recently caught the attention of PCRM scientists and member doctors for asking the federal government to make carcinogenicity testing longer, beginning while the animals are still in utero and continuing for the animals’ entire lives, until they die. Not only would such testing not mirror actual human exposure to environmental agents, it would use more animals and be more cruel than the current protocol. PCRM scientists and a PCRM member who is an oncologist have sent CSPI president Michael Jacobson, Ph.D., this letter, explaining their concerns. The letter also asks Dr. Jacobson to begin a dialog with PCRM, to learn about the how carcinogenicity testing can be made more human-relevant, and more humane, using 21st-century toxicology.
■21st-Century Chemical Regulation: Ensuring Protective Chemical Regulations That Avoid Animal Testing
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vegan
Grand sage
Grand sage
vegan


Nombre de messages : 1483
Date d'inscription : 24/09/2011

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MessageSujet: Re: Testing of Industrial Chemicals: Strategies that Save Animal   Testing of Industrial Chemicals: Strategies that Save Animal Icon_minitimeSam 23 Juin - 11:18

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Contemp Top Lab Anim Sci. 2004 Nov;43(6):42-51.
Laboratory routines cause animal stress.
Balcombe JP, Barnard ND, Sandusky C.
SourcePhysicians Committee for Responsible Medicine, Washington, DC 20016, USA.

Abstract
Eighty published studies were appraised to document the potential stress associated with three routine laboratory procedures commonly performed on animals: handling, blood collection, and orogastric gavage. We defined handling as any non-invasive manipulation occurring as part of routine husbandry, including lifting an animal and cleaning or moving an animal's cage. Significant changes in physiologic parameters correlated with stress (e.g., serum or plasma concentrations of corticosterone, glucose, growth hormone or prolactin, heart rate, blood pressure, and behavior) were associated with all three procedures in multiple species in the studies we examined. The results of these studies demonstrated that animals responded with rapid, pronounced, and statistically significant elevations in stress-related responses for each of the procedures, although handling elicited variable alterations in immune system responses. Changes from baseline or control measures typically ranged from 20% to 100% or more and lasted at least 30 min or longer. We interpret these findings to indicate that laboratory routines are associated with stress, and that animals do not readily habituate to them. The data suggest that significant fear, stress, and possibly distress are predictable consequences of routine laboratory procedures, and that these phenomena have substantial scientific and humane implications for the use of animals in laboratory research.

PMID:15669134[PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE] Publication Types, MeSH Terms
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