Over the years, with support from Congress, veterans and whistleblowers, the exposés helped terminate experiments in which scientists drilled holes in beagles’ skulls, cut out living dogs’ hearts, and injected latex and methamphetamines into the dogs, according to White Coat Waste Project [WCW].
Cruel and painful invasive experiments on dogs at the behest of the
U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) have ended, according to
the nonprofit
White Coat Waste Project (WCW) and news reports.
Protocol documents obtained by the organization note
that three studies involving canines are currently approved but that
“[n]o work is currently being done or planned to be done with
animals.”
One of the studies involves companion dogs with naturally-occurring
cancer who were voluntarily enrolled in the study, and not harmed.
However, the other two studies — one which involved performing open
heart surgery on dogs and implanting pacemakers and catheters, then
forcing the dogs to walk on treadmills, and the other which
similarly posited to study “heart failure” in the innocent animals —
are examples of the cruel and wasteful experiments WCW has been
campaigning to end for years.
“Our campaign spared countless dogs and cut millions in government
waste as we enacted precedent-setting state and federal bipartisan
legislation to defund the VA’s dog experiments,” said WCW Founder
and President Anthony Belloti. “Taxpayers shouldn’t be forced to
bankroll beagle abuse by bureaucrats in white lab coats.”
VA Press Secretary Terrence Hayes did not confirm the agency had
definitively terminated studies on dogs but offered the following
statement via email, “While there is nothing new to report at this
time, VA remains committed to the reduction of research with
canines, felines or non-human primates. We take this commitment
seriously and continue to take all steps to do so without
sacrificing the innovative strides in medical care improvements that
our Veterans warrant. We will continue to remain transparent with
our 5-year plan in reducing and or eliminating the use of sensitive
species.”
That 5 year plan, covering through 2025, indicates that
the “use of canines for specific research areas is likely to be
required in the future.”
But veterans — including Rep. Brian Mast, who lost both his legs
during service in Afghanistan— have increasingly joined the call to
end animal testing, including by the VA. Mast told ABC8News that
animal testing is “painful” and “cruel” and has been a key
legislator advocating for a more compassionate — and more effective
— approach.
“We have to say that there is a line here that we will not cross,”
he said.
Rep. Dina Titus, a member of the Congressional Animal Protection
Caucus who also has supported alternative methods to testing on
animals, applauded the impact of WCW’s work and the VA’s stated
decision to reduce or eliminate animal suffering.
“There are many alternatives to animal testing that are both humane
and yield better results so that we can save dogs, puppies and
taxpayer money,” she said. “I applaud the VA from moving away from
dog testing and will work to ensure other agencies follow their
lead.”
In 2016, WCW released its “Spending to Death” report, which detailed
government-funded testing on puppies and dogs, followed by a
relentless campaign to defund dog experiments at the VA, which the
organization claimed was conducting “the most painful dog tests in
the entire federal government.”
Over the years, with support from Congress, veterans and
whistleblowers, the exposés helped terminate experiments in which
scientists
drilled holes in beagles’ skulls, cut out living dogs’ hearts, and
injected latex and methamphetamines into the dogs,
according to WCW.
Other victories for dogs included the National Academy of Sciences
criticizing at least one of the studies as “unnecessary” and an
enacting a lab animal retirement policy — meaning the animals could
have a chance at life after the lab, rather than euthanasia or being
recycled into another gruesome experiment.
The impact for dogs is clear: In 2016, the VA reported using 220
dogs in experiments. But now, that number is down to zero, WCW
reported.