Coronavirus Has Physicians Committee Asking Wayne State University To Adopt Out Dogs, End Painful Experiments
DETROIT–In a letter to M. Roy Wilson, MD, president of Wayne State University, the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine—a national nonprofit of 12,000 doctors—urged the immediate adoption of all dogs used in the university’s infamous heart failure experiments. The letter details the extreme and painful conditions and interventions the dogs are subjected to and reviews the lack of scientific knowledge that has been gleaned from the experiments over the past 29 years.
On March 25, Wayne State announced that “all research activities and support should now be enabled remotely and any on-site operations paused at minimal operational level.” Considering this plan, Physicians Committee director of academic affairs John Pippin, MD, FACC, expressed concern to President Wilson: “For the dogs used in your university’s experiments this could mean languishing in cages with surgical wounds and cables and wires protruding from their bodies, or it could mean that your employees intend to kill those animals.”
Since 1991, Wayne State has subjected hundreds of dogs to numerous surgeries each, during which devices are implanted into their hearts and near major blood vessels. Surgically implanted electrodes increase the dogs’ heart rates to the point of heart failure, and clamps are placed to restrict blood flow to the kidney, causing hypertension. To control these devices and to collect data, as many as nine cables and wires are “tunnelled” between the dogs’ shoulder blades. These dogs are then forced to run on treadmills as experimental data are collected. According to official Wayne State records, as many as 25% of dogs are expected to die during or shortly after the procedures, before the data collection period begins. Dogs who do survive the initial surgeries are experimented on until they die as a result of these stresses.
After nearly three decades of research and $11.6 million from the National Institutes of Health (NIH), the experiments have resulted in no new treatments or knowledge about heart failure or hypertension. In contrast, human-based studies, including epidemiological studies, cell-based and computer-based research methods, donated human organs, and human clinical trials, have resulted in major medical findings.
“While the COVID-19 pandemic is having an enormous negative impact,” Dr. Pippin wrote, “Wayne State University should use this opportunity to do something that would save the lives of dogs and benefit humans.”
To speak with Dr. Pippin, please contact Reina Pohl at 202-527-7326 or rpohl [at] pcrm.org (rpohl[at]pcrm[dot]org).
Media Contact
Reina Pohl, MPH
202-527-7326
rpohl[at]pcrm.org
Founded in 1985, the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine is a nonprofit organization that promotes preventive medicine, conducts clinical research, and encourages higher standards for ethics and effectiveness in education and research.