PETA Statement: U.S. Spending Bill
For Immediate Release:
December 20, 2019
Contact:
Tasgola Bruner 202-483-7382
Please see the following statement from PETA regarding the 2020 U.S. spending bill, which puts pressure on federal research agencies to reduce the use of animals.
PETA thanks Senator Cory Booker for taking giant steps to eliminate the use of rabbits and horseshoe crabs in painful experiments required by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA). Language in the report supporting the appropriations bill urges the agency to use available non-animal methods.
Before companies can get approval to sell drugs and medical devices, the FDA requires that they conduct animal tests. One type of required test that is intended to spot substance contamination that might induce fever is the pyrogen test. In one version of the test, rabbits are injected with drugs or extracts of medical devices and restrained while their temperature is taken rectally—for up to 24 hours—before being killed or used in other experiments. In another version, horseshoe crabs are captured, drained of some of their blood, and, if they survive the procedure, returned to the sea—a practice that is to blame for recent collapses of horseshoe crab populations.
Fortunately, in a report on the funding bill, the U.S. Senate acknowledged that non-animal methods are “currently available” and that the FDA should report back to Congress on “steps taken to increase their use and effectiveness.”
We couldn’t agree more. In 2018, PETA scientists co-organized a workshop to help speed up the FDA’s acceptance of non-animal pyrogen tests. Involving the National Toxicology Program Interagency Center for the Evaluation of Alternative Toxicological Methods (NICEATM), along with representatives from the FDA, industry, and pyrogen researchers from around the world, this workshop outlined an approach that will help the FDA accept these modern, humane pyrogen tests in place of experiments on rabbits and horseshoe crabs.
PETA—whose motto reads, in part, that “animals are not ours to experiment”—opposes speciesism, a human-supremacist worldview. For more information, please visit PETA.org.