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PETA to Columbia
Board of Trustees: Help the Animals!
PETA’s
senior vice president of research & investigations, Mary Beth
Sweetland, has fired off a letter to the 24 members of Columbia
University’s Board of Trustees, calling on the trustees
to use their influence to help bring a permanent end to the experiments
of Connolly, Stark, and Ferin.
In referring to the stroke
experiments of E. Sander Connolly—in which Connolly
cut out the left eyes of baboons and used the empty eye sockets
to access and clamp off major blood vessels to the brain, inducing
a stroke—Sweetland exposes not only Connolly’s depraved
cruelty, but also his dishonesty.
After inducing strokes in the incarcerated baboons, Connolly administered
a test stroke drug, dehydroascorbic acid (DHA), supplied by Progenics
Pharmaceuticals. The DHA failed to alleviate the suffering of
the animals who were slouched over in their cages, unable to eat,
drink, or even lift their heads. Connolly noted this failure in
a letter to Columbia’s Animal Care and Use Committee: “We
completed a trial of a novel anti-oxidant compound (DHA) and were
able to show that its efficacy in lower rodent models is not mirrored
in primates.” Yet, three months later, Connolly is quoted
in a news release issued by Progenics as saying: “The positive
outcome of this study underscores the potential of DHA to protect
patients against the debilitating consequences of stroke.”
This “unconscionable failure to disclose critical information”
sinks Connolly’s academic credibility and Columbia University’s
integrity.
While Connolly has voluntarily stopped his cruel experiments,
PETA is calling on Columbia to permanently stop his stroke experiments
and two others.
Click here to read PETA’s
letter to members of Columbia’s Board of Trustees
Click
here to read Dr. Robert Hoffman’s critique on the use
of animals in stroke experiments.
Click
here to find out what you can do to help end these crude,
painful, traumatic, and wasteful experiments.
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