Four monkeys have died in Harvard Medical School labs in less than two years, the most recent incident occurring this spring when a cotton-top tamarin died of thirst for want of a water bottle. The Harvard hellmouth lab, however, isn’t reserved only for the lower primates — 41 deer mice died of thirst in April when their water source was mysteriously “cut off.” Michael Budkie, executive director of the non profit group Stop Animal Exploitation Now!, described the problem at Harvard’s labs as pervasive and said that something about how the labs are run really needs to change, like two years ago.
When you see multiple incidents at the same facility over a period of time, that’s when you realize that this is indicative of a system-wide problem.
Harvard Medical School Dean Jeffrey S. Flier ordered an independent review in March to evaluate the treatment of lab animals, and the USDA’s Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, or APHIS is currently investigating the death of five monkeys at the Harvard-affiliated New England Primate Research Center. For any former or current lab students with dreams of letting all the dissection-bound frogs free, this seems like a good opportunity to…well, not to jailbreak any lab monkeys because 28 Days Later taught us that nothing good can come from that, but maybe to start preparing for the ape uprising because it seems like that’s just got to happen eventually.
Harvard Medical school is cited for mistreatment of lab animals [WaPo]