Guest guest Posted August 20, 2002 Report Share Posted August 20, 2002 lion7boy (lion7boy) has sent you a news article Personal message: U.S. Drops Requirement for Some Animal Tests http://story.news./news?tmpl=story&u=/nm/20020820/sc_nm/science_animals_dc_3 News Home - - Help Welcome, Guest Personalize News Home Page - Sign In News Tuesday, August 20, 2002 Search News StoriesNews PhotosAudio/VideoFull CoverageThe New York TimesAll of for Advanced News Front Page Top Stories World Business Entertainment Sports Technology Politics Science Weather News Health Oddly Enough Op/Ed Lifestyle Local Comics News Photos Weather Most Popular Audio/Video Full Coverage Lottery Crosswords Full Coverage More about Animal Rights Related News StoriesScientists reprimanded for blasting mice with Prodigy, Bach AFP/ Asia News (Aug 19, 2002) Animal activists target US-based insurer Financial Times (Aug 13, 2002) Judge Orders PETA Party Animal's Release Washington Post (Aug 9, 2002) Opinion EditorialsCockfighting becomes rights issue Oklahoman (Aug 7, 2002) Animal experiments are important for Britain, and for the future of science The London Times (Jul 25, 2002) Stop activist criminals Philadelphia Inquirer (Jul 17, 2002) Feature ArticlesRIP: Alba, the Glowing Bunny Wired News (Aug 12, 2002) Racing dogs become pets: Greyhounds at the finish line Detroit Free Press (Jul 22, 2002) Related Web SitesCampaign for the Protection of Hunted Animals campaign to end fox, deer, hare, and mink hunting with dogs. Includes Countdown to the Ban, in pdf format. Countryside Alliance briefs available include Hunting with Dogs, in pdf format. League Against Cruel Sports local and national (UK) support groups campaigning to ban hunting with dogs. News Resources Providers Reuters Space.com AP News Alerts Environmental Protection Agency My Add Science - Reuters to My Science - Reuters U.S. Drops Requirement for Some Animal Tests Tue Aug 20,12:06 AM ET By Maggie Fox, Health and Science Correspondent WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. government is quietly advising that companies end some controversial animal tests, saying laboratory alternatives exist that are quicker and just as good, officials said on Monday. The tests look for corrosive chemicals and involve shaving an animal, painting the compound onto its skin and then waiting for up to two weeks to see if damage results. The recommendations, from a committee set up to find alternatives to animal tests, go to federal agencies ranging from the Environmental Protection Agency ( news - web sites) to the Department of Transportation, which can choose to change their own regulations. "They will consider these recommendations and, if applicable to the kind of products that they regulate, then they will consider revising their guidelines," said Dr. William Stokes, head of the Interagency Coordinating Committee on the Validation of Alternative Methods. ICCVAM, set up by the federal government to review animal tests, said four alternative tests exist that do not require the use of live animals. They are Episkin, based on human collagen, a human skin cell-based test called EpiDerm, the Rat Skin TER assay, which uses discs of rat skin, and Corrositex, which also uses layers of collagen -- the material that holds the skin together. "ICCVAM looked at three in-vitro tests (tests in a lab dish) for dermal skin corrosivity and concurred that positive results from these tests could be used to classify chemicals or products as corrosives and you would not need to use any animals for that determination," Stokes said in a telephone interview. "Nearly all chemicals that have corrosive properties are going to be detected in these tests." FASTER THAN ANIMAL TESTING Stokes did not know whether non-animal tests would cost less. "I know they will be a lot faster because with animal tests you have to wait for 14 days after applying the chemicals," he said. "These tests can be conducted in a day." Stokes said ICCVAM also accepted recommendations from the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development on replacing photoxocity tests using animals -- another toxic response skin test involving exposure to light. People for the Ethical treatment of Animals, which opposes animal tests, welcomed the new ruling, but with reservations. "This is something we have been pushing for at an international level," PETA spokesperson Jessica Sandler said. But, she noted, if any of the four tests gets a negative result, meaning it does not show a chemical is corrosive, the finding has to be confirmed using an animal test. She said the rulings did not affect the use of the Draize test -- in which chemicals are dripped into a rabbit's eye. "It is crazy that in 2002 we are still dripping chemicals into animals' eyes," Sandler said. "They need to confine animal tests to the trashbin of history." 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