Animal Defenders International (ADI) today launches a new report on the use of animals in research at Inveresk contract testing laboratory in Scotland.
Documents and photographs leaked to ADI provide a chilling insight into the world of contract research, where laboratories are paid to conduct animal experiments on behalf of manufacturers of products such as drugs, chemicals, household and industrial substances.
Inveresk laboratories, near Edinburgh, offers its clients dogs, monkeys, rats, mice, rabbits, pigs, guinea pigs, goats, cows, birds, and fish for experimentation and claims to be responsible for approximately 1% of all experiments taking place in the UK – over 25,000 animals every year.
Experiments like this are rarely published so this is a unique insight into the world of commercial animal experimentation.
The Inveresk reports show:
The ADI report discusses:
ADI has highlighted mistakes, inadequacies of scientific protocols, and contradictions in Inveresk’s own reports of their experiments.
ADI also discusses the protection afforded to laboratory animals under the Code of Practice for the Housing and Care of Animals Used in Scientific Procedures (COP), issued by the UK government’s Home Office under the authority of the Animal Scientific Procedures Act 1986.
ADI Chief Executive Jan Creamer said: “This reveals the true horror of regulatory testing on animals, and insight into the enormous level of suffering and carnage that will be brought about by the animal testing programme proposed in the EU’s new chemical regulations. Inveresk is the type of laboratory that will be undertaking the new EU chemical testing programme.
“UK and EU regulations require that animals should only be used when necessary; that nonanimal methods be sought. And yet we see at Inveresk, experiments on animals when human clinical trials are being undertaken, blunders during experimental procedures which cause animals severe suffering, animals being choked to death with paint for unnecessary tests.
“All of this is unecessary. ADI has proposed a new non-animal testing strategy for the new chemical regulations that used advanced techniques which will deliver the protection for humans and the environment that we all want to see, but without wasting animals’ lives in cruel and unnecessary tests.”
Click here to view the detailed Inveresk report.
Please help us end the abuse of animals, please make a donation today…
action alerts