IU research facilities issued citations after death of animals
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http://www.idsnews.com/news/story.aspx?id=87756
IU research facilities issued citations after death of animals
By Claire Aronson, Indiana Daily Student, Sunday, July 15, 2012e
Two IU research facilities in Indianapolis, IU School of Medicine and
Methodist Research Institute, received multiple citations by the U.S.
Department of Agriculture Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service
from two recent inspections.
IU School of Medicine received eight total non-compliances during the
two inspections, March 7 and June 6. During the first inspection, the
facility received four indirect citations. During the second, the
facility received four indirect citations, three of which were repeat
non-compliance.
Methodist Research Institute at IU Health was given seven citations on
March 1. Of the citations, one was a direct citation and the others were
indirect. However, because of the one direct citation, a visit by the
USDA inspector was required within 45 days of the initial inspection,
and the inspector found zero non-compliances on April 9.
Direct non-compliance is something that has a direct impact on an
animal’s welfare. Repeat non-compliance is something the USDA has
already cited the facility for in one inspection report that wasn’t
taken care of.
David Sacks, USDA spokesman for the APHIS, said the USDA is most
concerned with the direct and repeat non-compliances. If a facility
receives a direct citation, an inspector must return to the facility
within 45 days, and if the facility receives a repeat, the inspector
must return within 90 days.
“They are always going to be unannounced visits,” Sacks said. “So they
are always surprise inspections. (Inspectors) really want to get a real
clear picture of how (facilities) are treating their animals. The best
way to do that is to not tell a facility. When we show up, whether it is
Indiana University or Harvard or Ringling Brothers Circus, if we
regulate your facility, we are basically going to knock on the door and
announce ourselves. They have to let us in.”
The USDA inspection report for IU School of Medicine from June 6 reports
a pig death. The pig weighed 2.8 kilograms prior to the procedure, which
is below the protocol of using pigs weighing between 3 and 5 kilograms.
While the animal died early the morning following the procedure, the
report states “a definitive cause of death was not established for this
animal.”
“Animal research has and will continue to play a vital role in medical
advances for human health and has resulted in many life-saving and
life-extending treatments,” according to a statement released by the IU
School of Medicine.
“The Indiana University School of Medicine is committed to providing
humane care to the animals involved in research, and this commitment is
a significant component of the school’s reputation for high quality and
cutting-edge research. Any concerns expressed by the U.S. Department of
Agriculture in their routine inspections are taken very seriously. We
performed a thorough investigation and responded to their concerns. As a
result, we are making specific changes and taking the appropriate
actions so this does not happen again.”
Also, a dog that did not receive the proper pre-surgical routine died
after going into ventricular fibrillation on the table, according to the
USDA’s inspection of Methodist Research Institute at IU Health stated in
the protocol.
The report states that “preliminary necropsy findings showed a stomach
severely distended with food. Failure to provide appropriate
pre-operative care to the animals in accordance with established
veterinary medical and nursing practices will cause stress, physical
harm and unnecessary discomfort.”
Sacks said the USDA typically inspects every facility once a year.
However, it utilizes a risk-based scheduling system.
“If you are a facility that isn’t having any non-compliance items, then
typically you are going to see us once a year,” he said. “The inspector
in each area determines how often they are going to visit. If you are a
facility having problems adhering to the regulations or had an incident
that we need to closely monitor, the inspector can determine how often
he or she will go out.”
When a facility receives a citation, this doesn’t necessarily mean the
facility will receive a violation post-inspection, Sacks said.
“Something that gets cited on an inspection report doesn’t mean it is
equal to a violation,” he said. “Violation is something that comes about
after we conduct an investigation. That is something more serious. An
investigator is going to write down anything they see that is serious or
not so serious. Everything and all they see that is not in compliance
with federal regulations.”
Every university research facility needs its own oversight committee,
which is a group of individuals chosen by the university to approve
research conducted there, Sacks said.
“You don’t contact the USDA to see if you can do that research,” he
said. “You contact the oversight committee and spell it out to them. The
USDA inspector is not going to be looking over your shoulder when you
conduct the research. We are just going to make sure you did what you
said you were going to do with the University. We are also going to make
sure your animals are being properly cared for.”
Animal rights groups, such as Stop Animal Exploitation Now, send
complaints to the USDA daily, said Sacks, who receives about 600
complaints or inquiries a year.
“If we get a formal complaint, we are going to look into it,” he said.
“We are going to send the inspector to the facility to look into the
allegations contained in that complaint. It is within the rights of
these animal groups to be watchdogs of the USDA, and I understand their
role and understand what they do.”
SAEN co-founder Michael Budkie said he contacts the USDA to urge the
levying of fines in cases of severe violation of the Animal Welfare Act.
The USDA is instructed by Congress to enforce the Animal Welfare Act,
which states that these facilities must humanely care for and treat
their animals, Sacks said.
Budkie wrote two letters to the USDA regarding the citations the IU
facilities received.
“Our goal is to urge the USDA to administer the largest fine allowable
by law so that a meaningful penalty can be assessed against a laboratory
for criminal activity,” he said. “In the instance of the two facilities
connected to IU, animals were killed through negligence in both
facilities. Therefore, they clearly deserve major penalties.”
Sacks said different scenarios involve different details, and the USDA
will address them depending on each case.
“There are a lot of different ways we can find out what is going on,” he
said. “For the most part, these facilities call on their own. There is
that much interest in animal welfare. If an animal dies in your facility
or something happens, that doesn’t mean we are going to penalize that
facility. But certain things are going to cause us to look into certain
things further.”
Sacks said he realizes there are varying viewpoints.
“If you have half the country mad at you and half the country happy at
you, you are probably doing the right thing,” he said.
“That is at the heart of everything we do,” he said. “We want to make
sure our inspections are thorough and make sure our penalty actions are
appropriate and do what we can to make sure the animals are properly
cared for.”
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