17 May 2012
Last updated at 13:23 GMT
Government retains UK's strict animal testing regime
The UK says it will retain stricter animal testing standards than required by a new European Union Directive.
The Home Office Minister, Lynne Featherstone, said that special protection for dogs cats and primates would be maintained.
Ms Featherstone also said that a centralised system for approving research licenses would continue.
The statement was welcomed by the research community and animal welfare organisations.
But the RSPCA's senior scientific officer, Barney Reed said
that he was concerned the government was initially prepared to accept EU
regulations which would have allowed smaller cage sizes, the use of
less humane killing methods and the watering down of the powers of
ethics committees which oversee animal research.
"It's been unfortunate that we've had to battle for 18 months
to pretty much stand still and maintain the standards that we currently
have," he told BBC News.
Professor Roger Lemon, a
prominent medical researcher at University College London and spokesman
for the campaign organisation Understanding Animal Research, said the UK
had the highest welfare standards in the world for animal
experimentation.
"We applaud the Home Office decision to hold on to those high standards," he said.
The EU has set minimum standards for the care and welfare of
animals used in research in a directive which has to be implemented by
the beginning of next year. The regulations are largely in line with UK
directives which are policed and administered by the Home Office. But in
a small number of areas, the standards are slightly lower.
The chief executive of one of the organisations that funds
animal experiments, Prof Douglas Kell, said he welcomed legislation that
he believes aims to improve welfare standards across Europe.
"Harmonising standards ensures that researchers collaborating
across European borders are working together to achieve animal welfare
with a common understanding," he said.
"This is increasingly important in areas like livestock
diseases where researchers are working together to combat emerging
threats".
Kailah Eglington, the chief executive of the Dr Hadwen Trust,
which funds research into alternatives to the use of animals in
research, said that the amended act will enshrine the principles of
reduction, refinement and replacement of animal experimentation in law,
making it harder for scientists to use more animals in future research.
"The current 'gentlemen's agreement' of replacing animal
experiments with non-animal alternatives will be reinforced by
transposition of key new EU provisions into UK law," she said. "The new
regulations will help replace the use of animals in all medical research
and enable more scientists to focus on developing human-relevant
alternatives throughout Europe."
Troy Seidle, director of research & toxicology at Humane
Society International/UK, said that the Home Office's response offers
little in the way of reform in the way that animal experiments are
regulated in Britain.
"(It) is unlikely to do anything to significantly reduce the
number of animals subjected to experiments. This response seems largely
about maintaining the status quo which means maintaining an already
flawed system that is insufficiently scrutinised with independence or
scientific rigour," he said.
Dr Tony Peatfield, Director of Corporate Affairs at the
Medical Research Council (MRC) noted that the Home Office had responded
to calls by the research community to reduce the bureaucracy involved in
regulating animal experimentation.
"The MRC strongly supports any effort to reduce unnecessary
bureaucracy where there is no benefit to the welfare of research
animals. We particularly welcome the commitment to simplifying the
personal licensing system, aimed at ensuring that all those who work
with research animals are properly trained and fully competent; we look
forward to working with the Home Office to develop a simpler system."
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