Researcher out at University of Michigan following accusations of fraudulent experiments on animals
From Steve Neavling, Metrotimes.com, January 25, 2023
At least one researcher is no longer employed at the University of
Michigan after it was found that researchers conducted animal experiments
that were deemed fraudulent.
Dr. Chung Owyang, formerly a gastroenterology researcher in Michigan
Medicine, stopped working at the university on Jan. 3, university
spokeswoman Kim Broekhuizen told Metro Times on Wednesday.
Owyang’s research into brains and hormonal reactions resulted in four
publications that were later retracted after the University of Michigan
determined the work relied on falsified or fabricated data.
Broekhuizen said the university takes all research very seriously.
“The University of Michigan is committed to fostering and upholding the
highest ethical standards in the conduct of research and scholarship,”
Broekhuizen said. “U-M’s Office of the Vice President for Research employs a
Research Integrity Officer responsible for addressing and assessing
allegations of research misconduct. All allegations of research misconduct
are thoroughly reviewed for appropriate next steps.”
A national watchdog group has demanded that the University of Michigan must
“take action” against the researchers.
In a letter to University of Michigan President Santa Ono sent this week,
Stop Animal Exploitation Now! (SAEN), a national watchdog group that
investigates animal abuse and research, said the discredited work is a black
eye for the school.
“These individuals have demonstrated a total disregard for both the value of
scientific research and the reputation of the University of Michigan,” SAEB
co-founder Michael A. Budkie said in the letter. “They must not be allowed
to continue to damage not only the reputation of the University of Michigan,
but also the reputation of scientific institutions everywhere.”
SAEN also urged the university to return more than $5 million in federal
grants that helped fund the research.
“It is time for the University of Michigan to draw a line in the sand and
say ‘No More,’” Budkie wrote. “A very clear message must be sent to all
employees. Fraud will not be tolerated, and the University of Michigan will
act out of integrity, even if our staff has failed to do so.”
In a letter sent on Friday, SAEN urged the U.S. Department of Health and
Human Service’s Office of Research Integrity (ORI) to investigate.
A University of Michigan research misconduct investigation committee “found
that there was falsification and/or fabrication” of various data published
in the American Physiological Society and Journal of Neurophysiology, both
of which retracted the publications.
“There must be consequences for these heinous acts,” SAEN executive director
Michael A. Budkie wrote to ORI on Friday.
“It is even worse that hundreds of rats were subjected to highly invasive
procedures and killed for fraudulent experiments,” Budkie added. “This
project took the lives of animals to produce data that was, according to the
University of Michigan itself, falsified.”