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posted by martyb on Saturday November 11 2017, @12:37AM   Printer-friendly
from the monkey'ing-around dept.

https://www.nytimes.com/2017/11/07/science/chimps-sanctuaries-research.html

The era of biomedical research on chimpanzees in the United States is effectively over. Given the nearly 100-year history of experimenting on chimps, the changes seemed to come fairly quickly once they began.

In 2011, the director of the National Institutes of Health, Francis Collins, declared that the N.I.H. would fund no new biomedical research using chimps, which he described as "our closest relatives in the animal kingdom" deserving of "special consideration and respect."

[...] Dr. Collins's decision reflected widespread ethical concerns among scientists about the treatment of such social, intelligent animals. But on a practical level, the care of chimps is costly, and they aren't always a good model in which to study human diseases. They're also a magnet for public concern.

[...] By 2015, the N.I.H. had gone through several stages of decision-making and concluded that it would retire all chimps it owned, retaining none for potential emergency use — in case of a human epidemic, for instance. The agency owns about 220 chimps outside of those now in sanctuaries and supports another 80, which will also be retired.

That year the Fish and Wildlife Service classified all chimpanzees as endangered, removing a longstanding exemption for captive chimps that had allowed biomedical experiments. The decision made such research illegal without a permit requiring that any such experiments benefit chimpanzees. Privately funded medical research on privately owned chimps also was effectively banned.

Currently, about 547 chimps are still held at research institutions, according to ChimpCARE, a site that tracks all chimps in the United States. Some of them are owned or supported by the N.I.H., and some are owned by research institutes like New Iberia, which is part of the University of Louisiana at Lafayette.

[...] The sanctuaries hope eventually to put themselves out of business. If all goes as planned, in another 50 years or so, there will be no more lab retirees.


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  • (Score: 2) by Runaway1956 on Saturday November 11 2017, @03:38AM

    by Runaway1956 (2926) Subscriber Badge on Saturday November 11 2017, @03:38AM (#595478) Journal

    http://altweb.jhsph.edu/wc6/paper111.pdf [jhsph.edu]

    That PDF seems to be more authoritative, although it's becoming dated, Aug of 2007.

    Abstract
    The use of chimpanzees for biomedical research and testing has been on the decline in recent years and
    is now restricted or prohibited in a number of countries, largely due to ethical concerns, public opinion,
    financial costs, as well as scientific issues. The US and Gabon are the only countries that still have
    chimpanzees for research purposes, with the US having the largest colony in the world of approximately 1,200
    chimpanzees at nine U.S laboratories. A timeline and overview of existing and proposed international laws
    and resolutions regarding chimpanzee research will be discussed. Detailed historical and current information
    regarding chimpanzee research in the United States will also be provided, including areas of chimpanzee
    research and testing, demographics, financial costs of research and maintenance, status of alternatives, public
    opinion, and recent events that will impact the use of chimpanzees in the future. The Humane Society of
    the United States'
    Chimps Deserve Better
      campaign seeks to end invasive biomedical research and testing
    on chimpanzees in the United States and retire chimpanzees in laboratories to appropriate sanctuary. An
    overview and update

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