Experiments on Animals Reach 17 Year High in UK
Science Needs a ‘Roadmap to Replacement’ Says Dr Hadwen Trust For Humane Research
Home Office statistics released today (21 July 2009) reveal that Britain’s animal experiments have reached a shocking 17 year high at 3.7 million experiments, a 14% rise since 2007. The Dr Hadwen Trust for Humane Research, the UK’s leading non-animal medical research charity, today reacted by saying that far greater progress to replace animals with alternatives should have been made but instead animal numbers are now as high as they were in the early 1990s.
On this the 50th anniversary of the birth of the 3Rs (Russell and Burch’s concept of the replacement, reduction and refinement of animal experiments), the Dr Hadwen Trust says this is ‘a wake-up call moment for policy makers’ and is calling on all major political parties to commit to devising a ‘roadmap to replacement’. Click here to read our letter to Prime Minister Gordon Brown, copied also to David Cameron, Nick Clegg and Dr Caroline Lucas.

There were 3.656 million animal experiments started in 2008, involving 3.583 million individual animals – a shocking 39% increase since Labour came to power, a 14% rise since 2007 alone. There were significant increases in the experiments on GM animals (now 36.5% of all procedures); monkeys (16% rise); cats (17% rise); pigs (95% rise) and fish and amphibians (85% and 82% rise respectively). (see below for statistics of particular note).
Dr Sebastien Farnaud, Science Director at the Dr Hadwen Trust for Humane Research and a molecular biologist at Westminster University, believes far greater progress to replace animals should have been made:
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“This year is the fifty-year anniversary of the very concept of replacing, reducing and refining animal experiments and yet instead of an alternatives revolution we are marking the occasion with the highest level of animal experiments in seventeen years.” says Dr Farnaud. “It has repeatedly been shown how irrelevant to human patients animal disease models can be, so sustaining such high animal use is not in the best interests of science. With the scientific expertise this country has to offer, we should have seen far greater progress to replace animals with more advanced techniques. Instead animal numbers are now as bad as they were in the early 1990s. Such a shocking increase in animal experiments should be a wake-up call moment for policy makers that considerably more effort must be focused on alternatives development in biomedical science not simply to avoid animal suffering, but crucially so that medical research can benefit from the advantages that non-animal approaches can bring.”
The Dr Hadwen Trust has today written to the main political parties calling on them to commit to building a ‘roadmap to replacement’. A roadmap is needed to identify key target areas for increased funding, technology development, R&D and political support in order to progressively reduce and ultimately replace animal experiments.
The Dr Hadwen Trust for Humane Research funds cutting-edge research at universities across Britain. Our projects aim to replace the use of animals in medical research and by so doing, improve the relevance and quality of research into debilitating conditions such as multiple sclerosis, cystic fibrosis, skin cancer and brain disorders. For example, in March a Dr Hadwen Trust-funded three-dimensional human cell model of early breast cancer won the NC3Rs’ animal replacement prize. The model offers a more human-relevant approach and replaces experiments that can use up to 400 mice per test in tumour studies. Click here for our Media Briefing on non-animal replacement research. http://www.drhadwentrust.org/media-briefings/media-briefings
Statistics of note:
- There has been a 39% increase in animal experiments since
Labour came to power in 1997.
- 14% rise in animal experiments since 2007
- 16% rise in procedures on GM animals since 2007
- 16% rise in monkey experiments since 2007 (61% increase in
monkeys used for cardiovascular experiments; 34% rise in nervous system
research)
- 17% rise in cats, and 9% rise in mice used since 2007
- 95% rise in pig experiments (mainly immunology)
- 65% of procedures conducted without any form of anaesthesia
- Genetic modification of animals now represents 36.5% of all
procedures
- Decreases in use of dogs (18%), rabbits (13%)
- All animal procedures are defined by the Animals (Scientific
Procedures) Act 1986 as likely to cause “pain, suffering, distress or
lasting harm”.
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- Charity Concerned About Veterinary Vaccine Damage to Animals
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it is a sickening fact that animal reaserch is all about profit making for the large pharmecutical companies. and is just a way to stop them from being sued when people die from thier products. people really need to be educated. i was recently on a forum were a lot of animal lovers were praising themselves for doing the race for life for cancer reaserch. i gave them loads of info on how people were dying due to the irrelevency of animal testing in terms of human diseases but to no avail. infact i only had one comment of support from another lady, who like myself is an advocate of the doctor hadwen trust. unfortunately the women were more inclined to believe the heart wrenching adverts from cancer reaserch than me, that non animal trusts are finding cures. more donations need to be given to the doctor hadwen trust then maybe they would be able to fight these cruel charities on thier own forum, ie the media.
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