In our survey of the animal charity field, we found that
laboratory animal groups received less funding than farm animal advocacy groups and far less funding than companion animal advocacy groups.
Not exact matches
John Eppig, a reproductive biologist at Jackson
Laboratory in Bar Harbor, Maine raised the concern that no
animal studies with a control
group have been done — a standard practice with experimental medical procedures — yet somehow the procedure is being tried on humans.
For the final year of his new degree, Franco did a 1 - year internship in the
Laboratory Animal Science
group at IBMC, led by Anna Olsson.
The tactic is the latest attempt by the
animal rights
group to shut down monkey behavioral experiments at Suomi's Poolesville, Maryland,
laboratory, and critics say it crosses the line.
This enabled them to greatly reduce the number of
laboratory animals, because usually different
groups of
animals have to be used for such comparative studies.
For his postdoc, Guttal moved to the
laboratory of Iain Couzin in the Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology at Princeton University to study self - organized movement in
animal groups, returning to the interest that had drawn him to research years before.
Most
laboratory specimens trace their heritage back to a single
group of 34
animals that were taken out of Xochimilco by a French - funded expedition in 1863.
Laboratory Animals publish this month a paper summarising the findings of an NC3Rs expert working
group who have been investigating the impact of rodent age on study outcomes.
Making use of cell and
animal models, my
laboratory group addresses some of the fundamental questions of how ethanol exposure injures the liver, with a goal ofidentifying the individual targets of ethanol - induced injury and the specific responses of the key cell types within the liver, as well as the integrated, organismal response to this ethanol - induced injury.
2010 — Investigator, Institute of
Laboratory Animal Sciences and Max - Planck - Partner -
Group on Stem Cell Aging, Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences 2007 — 2009 Associate Investigator, Institute of
Laboratory Animal Sciences and Max - Planck - Partner -
Group on Stem Cell Aging, Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences 2007 Posdoc Fellow at Department of Molecular Medicine and Max - Planck - Research -
Group on Stem Cell Aging, Ulm University 2005 Guest scientist at
Laboratory of Stem Cell Therapy, Institute of Medical Science, University of Tokyo 2003 — 2004 Visiting Scientist at Gene Mapping Center, Max Delbr ¨ ¹ ck Center, Berlin, Germany 2001 — 2003 Research Assistant, Sino - German
Laboratory for Molecular Medicine, Fu Wai Hospital & Cardiovascular Institute, Peking Union Medical College, Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences 1997 — 1998 Resident Physician, Youjian Hospital, Shangdong, China
Another is to monitor the effects of transplanting telomerase - deficient but ex vivo telomere - extended bone marrow into late - generation, TMM - disabled mice, so as to be certain that the niche of such
animals (or, by implication, aging humans) will support the homing, engraftment, and initial development and differentiation of such cells; the necessary research is underway now thanks to a SENS Foundation grant to Dr. Zhenyu Ju of the Institute of
Laboratory Animal Sciences and Max - Planck - Partner -
Group on Stem Cell Aging in the Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences, and research partner of prominent telomere biologist Dr. K. Lenhard Rudolph.
Bonaparte D (1), Cinelli P, Douni E, Hérault Y, Maas M, Pakarinen P, Poutanen M, Lafuente MS, Scavizzi F; Federation of European
Laboratory Animal Science Associations Working
Group.
Not only had Dalldorf and Sickles identified the first members of a very large
group of human viruses, but they also introduced and popularized a new and inexpensive
animal into the virology
laboratory — the suckling mouse.
But two new studies using different
groups of people — not
laboratory animals — have found that natural vitamin E is utilized twice as efficiently as the synthetic form.
Trihalomethanes (THMs) are Cancer
Group B carcinogens, meaning they've been shown to cause cancer in
laboratory animals.
with frequent attacks on
laboratories by
animal rights activists from groups such as the Animal Liberation
animal rights activists from
groups such as the
Animal Liberation
Animal Liberation Front.
There are
groups called «Bunchers» that look through the classifieds for free dogs, cats and other
animals to collect then sell these poor
animals to
laboratories for
animal testing, research and experimentation.
Comparative Orthopaedic
Laboratory, University of Missouri, Columbia, Missouri, USA (Cook); Peak Veterinary Referral Center, Williston, Vermont, USA (Schulz); Arthrex, Inc., Naples, Florida, USA (Karnes); Small
Animal Orthopedic Surgery, University of Georgia, College of Veterinary Medicine, Athens, Georgia, USA (Franklin); Veterinary Orthopedic and Sports Medicine
Group, Annapolis Junction, Maryland, USA (Canapp Jr.); CARE Veterinary Center, Frederick, Maryland, USA (Lotsikas); Fitzpatrick Referrals, Surrey, UK (Fitzpatrick); Virginia Veterinary Specialists, Charlottesville, Virginia, USA (Wheeler, Stiffler); Toronto Veterinary Emergency and Referral Hospital, Toronto, Ontario (Gillick); BluePearl Georgia Veterinary Specialists, Atlanta, Georgia, USA (Cross); Sage Centers for Veterinary Specialty and Emergency Care, Concord, California, USA (Walls); Montana Veterinary Surgical Service, Bozeman, Montana, USA (Albrecht); Eastern Carolina Veterinary Referral, Carolina Canine Sports Medicine and Rehabilitation
Group, Wilmington, North Carolina, USA (Williams); Western Carolina Veterinary Surgery, Asheville, North Carolina, USA (Crouch); Department of Small
Animal Clinical Sciences, College of Veterinary Medicine, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida, USA (Lewis, Pozzi); Ridge Referrals, South Devon, UK (Ridge).
Countless other
groups have been formed to help farm
animals,
animals in
laboratories, overworked
animals like donkeys and camels, stray
animals and feral cats, and other injured and needy creatures both domesticated and wild.
By requiring the research institution to enter into a contract with an
animal rescue
group or shelter, there is a clear path to transition cats and dogs from the
laboratory or testing facility to an adoption center who can offer these
animals the possibility of living out the rest of their lives in a loving home.
«The results of
laboratory tests on a patient are compared to reference ranges established by measuring the
laboratory parameters in a
group of normal
animals.
We are the only veterinary hospital in Manhattan's Tribeca Soho area to offer all of the following: Pet health services 7 days a week Internship - trained veterinarians Board - certified specialists in internal medicine and cardiology Cat and dog surgery Routine and advanced dental and oral care Diseases of Older Pets (Geriatric Care) Pain Management & Rehabilitation Oncology & Palliative Care Digital radiology In - house
laboratory Please Note: Tribeca Soho
Animal Hospital is a member of the Downtown Veterinary Medical Hospitals
Group (DVM Hospitals).
Although
laboratory animals, like farm
animals, are highly regulated by the USDA, these creatures are probably the most «unnoticed»
group in the study, due in part to the general public's relatively nonexistent interaction with this subgroup.
Julia Felippe, Associate Professor of Large
Animal Internal Medicine at the Cornell University College of Veterinary Medicine, and her
laboratory group form the Equine Immunology Lab, studies the equine immune system with specific interest in immunodeficiencies and developmental immunity of the foal.
Also added are a self - contained laundry and sterilization room; improved
laboratory facilities; a 120 - seat humane education auditorium for use by employees, school children, civic
groups and
animal - related organizations; and a fleet of 10 vehicles, including two
animal ambulances, an investigation unit and an education vehicle called «Know Us Ark».
The bill is backed by an advocacy
group, the White Coat Waste Project, which has been using the USDA - APHIS database to gather much of its information on
animal testing at hundreds of federal
laboratories.
With 14 participants from six countries, the Numbers
group benefitted from inclusion of leading representatives from academia,
animal insurance, kennel clubs, data analysis,
laboratories and business, enabling discussion on a wide range of data topics.