NEWS RELEASE
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Tuesday 7 May 2002
CONTACT:
Simon Chaitowitz, Communications Director
tel: 202-686-2210, ext. 309; simonc@pcrm.org
Doctors Deliver 118,000 Petitions to the March of Dimes, Call on Charity to Stop Funding Controversial Animal Experiments
Washington, D.C.Representatives from the Physicians Committee for
Responsible Medicine (PCRM) delivered nearly 120,000 petitionsfrom Americans in
every state of the countryto the March of Dimes' Washington office this morning,
calling on the charity to stop funding wasteful animal experiments.
Particularly contentious are experiments at the Oregon Regional Primate Research Center
in which a March of Dimes-funded experimenter is impregnating monkeys, inducing infections
in them to trigger miscarriages, then killing their babies and dissecting them. The link
between bacterial infections in women and preterm birth is already well established.
PCRM estimates the March of Dimes spends millions each year funding animal experiments,
resources that would be better directed to programs that assist at-risk mothers and focus
on human-based research. "Only human-centered research will prevent birth defects
such as cerebral palsy, a condition of which I am all too familiar," says PCRM
spokesperson Lawrence Carter-Long, a former poster child for cerebral palsy research who
believes animal experiments hamper medical research.
PCRM members recently leafleted participants
in 125 U.S. cities during the March of Dimes annual fundraiser WalkAmerica,
alerting them to problems inherent in the charity's support of animal
experiments. PCRM's campaign to reform the March of Dimes has seen
great success over the past year. Four major March of Dimes supportersKmart,
PepsiCo, Sara Lee, and Publixannounced their decisions to
restrict their March of Dimes donations to only human-based research
and services. "A growing number of Americans are recognizing
that the best way to advance human health is to redirect our research
dollars away from animal experiments," explains PCRM president
Neal Barnard, M.D.
In recognition of this trend, PCRM recently launched the first-ever program to identify
and certify those health charities that do not fund or conduct animal experiments. The
Humane Charity Seal of Approval (www.HumaneSeal.org)
makes it simple for donors to choose a charity that matches their values. A poll conducted
last November shows that 56 percent of all Americans are more likely to donate to a health
charity that does not fund animal experiments than one that does.
Visuals: A photo of PCRM staffaccompanied by Lawrence
Carter-Longdelivering 120,000 petitions to the March of Dimes is available for use.
Photos of March of Dimes-funded research are also available. Contact Simon Chaitowitz,
PCRM communications director, at 202-6866-2210, ext. 309, or simonc@pcrm.org.
Founded in 1985, the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine (PCRM) is a
nonprofit health organization dedicated to promoting preventive medicine and higher
standards in medical research, education, and practice.
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