Vet Pro Veterinary Nursing, Veterinary Nurses, Veterinary Surgeons, Vets, Veterinary
Use this menu/top navigation bar to access rest of site
Pet Reception Home

  Contact Us

Pet News Veterinary News :
 Submit Articles
 Stories Archive
 Search
Veterinary Services Veterinary Services:
 Veterinary Calendar
 Vet Sales/Wanted
 Find my Nearest Vet
 Veterinary Jobs
Veterinary Community Community :
 Recommend Us
 Sign VetPro Guestbook
 Chat Rooms
 Photo Gallery
 Rehoming
 Lost and Found
 Q & As
 Cattery/Kennel Directory
Veterinary Flyer Vetpro Flyer
Veterinary Links Vet Links
 

Most recent jobs - many more in database
·VN for an ongoing position START ASAP: WOKING
·VN for an ongoing position START ASAP: Cambridge
·On Going VN Locum position - START ASAP: London
·Small Animal Vet: Peterborough
·Practice Manager ASAP: East London

Listen to music whilst you visit Vetpro -INTERNET RADIO.

Copyright Just4me.NL

  Create an account
Excellent news regarding testing on animals
Posted on Sunday, April 29 @ 07:11:26 BST by jenvetadmin

Bunny Tests of cosmetic products on rabbits and mice will soon be banned after European scientists announced that most experiments can now be carried out using non-animal alternatives. The switch will spare almost 20,000 rabbits a year and 240,000 mice from a life of misery in the laboratory. Scientists say the new tests will actually provide a more reliable way of checking the safety of chemicals in everyday products such as makeup and washing-up liquid. Yesterday, the scientific advisory committee of the European Centre for the Validation of Alternative Methods approved five new tests which make the use of live rabbits and mice unnecessary. A full ban is subject to approval by all 27 member states, but this could happen by the end of the summer. This extract taken from The Daily Mail. Please click read more for the rest of this article.

Under European Union rules, testing on animals must stop once other options have been validated by experts. Potential skin irritants such as cosmetics and new chemicals must be tested to ensure they are correctly labelled to declare the level of risk they pose to humans. At the moment all such experiments - including repeat testing when new products reach the market - is done using 20,000 animals a year, mostly rabbits. In addition 30,000 chemicals, many in use for years, require oneoff skin allergy tests, using 480,000 mice. Half of those will now be reprieved. The substitute tests are the result of three years' work by the European Commission to reduce methods of animal testing for cosmetics, drugs and chemicals. One of the animal-free tests involves growing human skin in the lab and using it to predict whether potential chemicals irritate it. The experiment is so accurate that testing on rabbits has been rendered redundant. Another uses animal tissue from slaughterhouses to assess the severity of eye irritants, rather than testing on live rabbits. A third, used to test skin allergies, will reduce testing on animals by half. Jan Creamer, chief executive of the National Anti-vivisection Socialternativesety, said the announcement was "long overdue". She said: "All of those lives are worth saving. This has been a 25-year campaign. "I think the only small pocket of resistance will be from a small minority of scientists who are stuck in the mud. "They don't want to retrain on many scientific techniques. "I would think most companies would welcome this. Non-animal are safer and we can have the results in days. "This is the future for scientific research." Some rabbits and mice will still be needed for cosmetic testing, however, along with guinea pigs and rats. An EU spokesman said the medical advances were significant because a directive will ban the testing of cosmetic ingredients on animals from 2009. "These (animal-free) tests are an important part of the European Commission's policy to reduce, replace and refine tests on animals in the EU," he said. The news is a victory for animal rights protesters. Yesterday an 88-year-old woman began a two- day fast to protest against brain experiments being conducted on a macaque monkey at Oxford University. Joan Court, from Cambridge, is synchronising her protest with World Week for Animals in Laboratories. A recent poll showed almost 40 per cent of adults opposed the use of scientific testing on animals.

 
Related Links
· More about Bunny
· News by jenvetadmin


Most read story about Bunny:
National Rabbit Week


Article Rating
Average Score: 0
Votes: 0

Please take a second and vote for this article:

Excellent
Very Good
Good
Regular
Bad



Options

 Printer Friendly Page  Printer Friendly Page

 Send to a Friend  Send to a Friend



 
RIG Vet Recruitment is the trading name of RIG Veterinary Recruit Limited. Registered in England and Wales number 5452945. Registered Office: The White Cottage, 19 West Street, Epsom, Surrey, KT18 7BS

All logos and trademarks in this site are property of their respective owner. The comments are property of their posters, all the rest © 2004 by me
To contact the Vetpro Team please email webmaster@vetpro.co.uk
 
RIG Vet Recruitment is the trading name of RIG Veterinary Recruit Limited. Registered in England and Wales number 5452945. Registered Office: The White Cottage, 19 West Street, Epsom, Surrey, KT18 7BS

All logos and trademarks in this site are property of their respective owner. The comments are property of their posters, all the rest © 2004 by me
To contact the Vetpro Team please email webmaster@vetpro.co.uk
Web site engine's code is Copyright © 2003 by PHP-Nuke. All Rights Reserved. PHP-Nuke is Free Software released under the GNU/GPL license.
Page Generation: 0.064 Seconds. -