DYSPEPSIA GENERATION

We have seen the future, and it sucks.

The Dangers of Using One Lab Animal to Study Every Disease.

18th November 2011

Read it.

“I began to realize that the ‘control’ animals used for research studies throughout the world are couch potatoes,” he tells me. It’s been shown that mice living under standard laboratory conditions eat more and grow bigger than their country cousins. At the National Institute on Aging, as at every major research center, the animals are grouped in plastic cages the size of large shoeboxes, topped with a wire lid and a food hopper that’s never empty of pellets. This form of husbandry, known as ad libitum feeding, is cheap and convenient since animal technicians need only check the hoppers from time to time to make sure they haven’t run dry. Without toys or exercise wheels to distract them, the mice are left with nothing to do but eat and sleep—and then eat some more.

I’m sure this weighs heavily on your mind, as it does on mine. And Slate‘s, too, of course. I’m glad at least one Voice of the Crust is willing to write about such serious concerns.

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