Seed Media Group

Search this blog

Profile

AngryToxicologist is a scientist in the public health sector, knows plenty about toxicology, and is occasionally angry about it all. Drop me a line at tox@angrytoxicologist.com.

Recent Posts

Recent Comments

Archives

Blogroll

Useless and Random

Any money I would have gotten from writing this blog is donated to the National Capital Poison Control Center. They rely on grants, save lives, and decrease health care costs. So read this blog every day!

What I'm reading, watching, and rating:

SawMichael Clayton*** out of 5

ReadMiddlesex**** out of 5

SawThe Lives of Others***** out of 5. Best movie I've seen in a long time.

« Washington Post really screws up on Animal Testing | Main | Non-stick, non-stain, non-breakdown wonder chemicals »

Best way to reduce animals in tox test and other thoughts

Category: Regulations
Posted on: April 18, 2008 8:55 AM, by angrytoxicologist

I'm waiting around for a meeting (about animal testing!) and thought I'd share a few things that I've been thinking about.

1) While we're not going to stop using animals for testing in a long time it is a good idea to reduce them where we can and where industry and the public (at-large; I know industry is the public, too) can agree one should strike when the iron is hot - even when the reasons are really different.

2) Will the use of this alternative method increase the number of animals later? If refined models don't provide adequate information or aren't accurate enough, you'll end up using more animals in the long run for re-tests when the deficiencies are brought up.

3) Want to know the best way to reduce animal use? Do the friggin tests right, with appropriate animal numbers the first time! Those who aren't toxicologists would be astonished how often this happens, especially on the environmental side. Some half-assed study shows equivical findings and everybody fights about it so more and more studies are done (most not fully complete either). At the end of 5-10 years of fighting, you've used way more animals than you would have if you conducted a bullet-proof study to begin with. So, animal rights people, if you really want to do the most good, work for stricter manditory standards for tox studies, especially on the environmental side of things.

Since it's Friday and I haven't posted anything in a while, here's your Friday aural pleasure:

Happy friday!

TrackBacks

TrackBack URL for this entry:

Comments

Hmmm....I have been wondering for awhile, just exactly how do they experiment on animals? Are there pictures and such?

Posted by: Zena | April 19, 2008 12:24 PM

Had to laugh at "do the friggin' tests right" - Sadly, the same thing goes for human drug trials in ALL phases!

Posted by: researchgirl | April 23, 2008 10:49 PM

Post a Comment

(Email is required for authentication purposes only. Comments are moderated for spam, your comment may not appear immediately. Thanks for waiting.)





Having problems commenting? (UPDATED)

Search All Blogs

Blogs in the Network

Top Five: Most German

Top Science Stories

powered by SEED - seedmagazine.com