From Patrick Reilly, NYPost.com, May 19, 2023
The University of South Carolina has halted its psychology department’s
electrical shock experiments on cocaine-addicted rats after receiving an
anonymous complaint.
According to the university, it opened an investigation in November after
fielding the complaint concerning a research project that included shocking
rats that had been given cocaine, Fox Carolina reported.
The experiment, funded by a $248,216 grant from National Institute on Drug
Abuse (NIDA), sought to understand why addicts continue to abuse drugs
despite negative consequences.
During USC’s investigation, experts determined that the experiment exceeded
some parameters approved by the university’s Institutional Animal Care and
Use Committee (IACUC), though “the experimental procedures in question were
within generally accepted research practices,” officials said.
According to a letter from USC’s director of research compliance to the
federal Office of Laboratory Animal Welfare, the electroshocks were
administered for longer than approved.
“Modifications to the research protocol were mandated and additional
oversight will be required if and when the faculty member wishes to resume
the project,” said Jeff Stensland, USC’s Assistant Vice President of
Institutional Relations and Public Affairs.
A spokesperson for NIDA told Fox Carolina that the project remains in good
standing.
USC stood by its research, claiming that it is “committed to upholding the
highest standards in the ethical treatment and responsible use of animals.”
All research involving animals, the school said, is “highly regulated and
subject to rigorous approval and oversight procedures.
The university added that it has been accredited for 39 years by the
Association for Assessment and Accreditation of Laboratory Animal Care
International, and is in “excellent standing” with the US Department of
Agriculture and the National Institutes of Health.
Activists have condemned the project as “barbaric.”
Stop Animal Exploitation Now (SAEN) sent a letter to USC President Michael
Amiridis on May 10, calling for the professor leading the research team to
be banned from experiments involving animals.
“This is the kind of thing that gives people like me nightmares,” SAEN
Executive Director Michael Budkie told the outlet.
The university has yet to decide if it will resume the project.
The cocaine experiment is one of three in the last six months involving USC
animal research gone awry, according to records reviewed by Fox Carolina.
Another report sent by USC to the Office of Laboratory Animal Welfare said
that two rats were experiencing breathing issues after receiving an oral
gavage in February.
The Department of Laboratory Animal Resources (DLAR) instructed the
investigator on the project to euthanize both of them.
One died before it was euthanized and the other was euthanized the following
day, according to the report.
When DLAR visited the lab, the report claims officials observed the
procedure repeated proficiently but found the cleanliness of the metabolic
caging in the lab to be unacceptable. The lab was unable to provide
sanitation records, the report said.
In November, six mice on a breeding-only protocol were — without
authorization — injected with nanoparticles as part of a project funded by
the National Institutes of Health, records show.
The mice had to have their tails amputated after they suffered unexpected
necrosis, which may have been caused by the injections.