Michael Harrop
Well-known member
https://www.science.org/content/article/new-nih-office-reduce-use-animals-research
https://www.shorenewsnetwork.com/2025/05/05/nih-shuts-down-final-beagle-lab-ending-decades-of-painful-dog-experiments/
I have mixed feelings about that.
https://www.shorenewsnetwork.com/2025/05/05/nih-shuts-down-final-beagle-lab-ending-decades-of-painful-dog-experiments/
In one of his first public moves as director of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), Jayanta “Jay” Bhattacharya is creating a new office to coordinate efforts to reduce animal testing across the agency and the research that it funds. A statement from NIH yesterday didn’t provide a timeline
NIH’s prioritization of nonanimal research follows a similar announcement from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration earlier this month that it was phasing out animal testing for certain new therapies.
NIH noted that animal-free research methods could include microfluidic devices that mimic human organs, computational modeling, organoids—organlike structures grown from human stem cells—and real-world data on health outcomes from large groups of people.
In a televised interview, Bhattacharya stated, “We got rid of all of the beagle experiments on NIH campus.”
I have mixed feelings about that.
- The gut microbiome is a major factor in why animal studies aren't reproducible and applicable to humans. https://humanmicrobiome.info/animal-models/
- Mouse studies have led to important findings in the microbiome field, such as the long-term harms of antibiotics and junk diets that compound over generations. https://humanmicrobiome.info/antibiotics/
- I'm concerned there may not be a good alternative for using mice to figure out the best methods to clear the existing gut microbiome, which I currently think is the #1 most important scientific pursuit.
- Format correct?
- Yes
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