PETA Helps End Cruel Sepsis Experiments on Animals

PETA Helps End Cruel Sepsis Experiments on Animals



PETA has long been vocal about the of sepsis experiments on , arguing that these tests are not only inhumane but also ineffective for understanding the deadly condition in humans.

The National Institute of General Medical Sciences (NIGMS), a major funder of sepsis research, has announced a significant policy change: it will no longer fund the most common types of -based sepsis experiments. Instead, the agency will allocate resources to superior, human-relevant research methods.

This landmark decision was revealed on June 4 at the Shock Society’s Annual Conference, a key event in sepsis research. A neuroscientist was present when NIGMS declared its unwillingness to continue funding sepsis experiments that use mice, a statement that sent shockwaves through the community of animal experimenters.

The agency urged researchers to adopt animal-free methods, such as using human cells, specimens, and data sets—approaches PETA has consistently promoted in its Research Modernization Deal.

The shift in policy comes after years of PETA’s relentless campaigning. They have used placards, email campaigns, and video messages from sepsis survivors, and even filed a landmark lawsuit to draw attention to the issue.

PETA’s efforts have highlighted the NIH’s own admission, dating back to 2013, that sepsis does not affect mice in the same way it affects humans. Despite this knowledge, NIH continued to fund animal-based sepsis research, leading to the suffering and death of countless animals in experiments that ultimately failed to benefit human health.

PETA’s 2021 lawsuit against NIH played a crucial role in this policy reversal. The lawsuit challenged the legality of NIH’s funding for sepsis experiments on animals, citing decades of failures and the agency’s obligation to reduce animal use, minimize their suffering, and prioritize research that directly benefits human health.

This policy change marks a monumental victory for both animal welfare and scientific progress. By redirecting funds toward human-relevant research methods, NIGMS is aligning with an evidence-based approach that spares animals from needless cruelty while aiming to find real solutions for the 1.7 million Americans affected by sepsis each year.

This article by Trinity Sparke was first published by One Green Planet on 21 June 2024. Image Credit :Egoreichenkov Evgenii/Shutterstock.

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