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kpete

(71,989 posts)
Thu Jan 24, 2013, 11:56 AM Jan 2013

NIH Plans to Retire Chimpanzees From Research

Source: Discover Magazine

NIH Plans to Retire Chimpanzees From Research
By Breanna Draxler | January 24, 2013 8:09 am

.....................


Researchers have made strides in understanding human diseases such as Hepatitis C and HIV-Aids by using chimpanzees as test subjects. But public and institutional pushback has caused the U.S. National Institutes of Health (NIH) to rein in its chimpanzee research in recent years. A report [pdf] released by a NIH working group Tuesday calls for an even more drastic cut in the number of chimpanzees used for research as well as a reform of the way that research is conducted in the future.

Chimpanzees are a valuable resource for medical research because they are the present-day species most closely related to humans. For the same reason, using chimps as test subjects brings up a whole crop of animal rights issues. The real question is if these animal studies are really necessary for medical research anymore.

The National Institutes of Health are responsible for over half the world’s research chimps. Only 282 of their 670 chimpanzees are still actively used in studies; the rest are either inactive or retired. Another 350 chimpanzees are scattered among other research facilities across the country. NIH has been seriously rethinking its use of chimpanzees over the past couple of years, so the director commissioned a working group to counsel future chimp research efforts. The group’s recommendations to the NIH, released this week, will be available for public comment for the next 60 days before the NIH director makes a final call on putting the recommendations into effect.

The report recommends retiring the vast majority of research chimpanzees and relocating them to sanctuaries ASAP. Congress has already put a ceiling on federal chimp retirement spending—no more than $30 million a year. The counsel advises that only 50 chimps be kept for future studies, and that the bar be raised on what studies will qualify. In order to conduct tests on these primates, studies would need to be proven necessary for human health and impossible to conduct without the primates. Projects would also require approval from an independent committee that includes public representation.

Read more: http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/80beats/?p=42498#.UQFYmx2EW3E

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NIH Plans to Retire Chimpanzees From Research (Original Post) kpete Jan 2013 OP
We retired our national chimp on January 20, 2009. geek tragedy Jan 2013 #1
Ditto! SoapBox Jan 2013 #3
The report recommends they retire them. The NIH gets the final say in 60 days. Do sinkingfeeling Jan 2013 #2
Excellent, thanks!! arcane1 Jan 2013 #4
Is this to be interpreted only literally, or can it also be understood metaphorically? NT Trillo Jan 2013 #5
Do they get Social Security and Medicare? yellowcanine Jan 2013 #6
Well is'nt this swell. skamaria Jan 2013 #7
That's what the for-profit prisons are for now. valerief Jan 2013 #8
Retire to where? nt silvershadow Jan 2013 #9
Thank you, God! judesedit Jan 2013 #10
 

geek tragedy

(68,868 posts)
1. We retired our national chimp on January 20, 2009.
Thu Jan 24, 2013, 11:59 AM
Jan 2013

Good to see the rest headed there as well--they deserve much better than what he got.

SoapBox

(18,791 posts)
3. Ditto!
Thu Jan 24, 2013, 12:40 PM
Jan 2013

...I say use that bunch that retired on January 20, 2009 for research on a How-Stupid-Are-You study.

sinkingfeeling

(51,454 posts)
2. The report recommends they retire them. The NIH gets the final say in 60 days. Do
Thu Jan 24, 2013, 12:04 PM
Jan 2013

you have a link to the public comment site?

I found the link here: http://grants.nih.gov/grants/rfi/rfi.cfm?ID=31

skamaria

(329 posts)
7. Well is'nt this swell.
Thu Jan 24, 2013, 01:24 PM
Jan 2013

I'm sure this is cold comfort to the thousands of chimps and orangs that have been tortured to death in the past.

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