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Hours after Republican lawmakers sent a letter to National Institutes of Health Director Jay Bhattacharya asking him to end dog and cat testing, two top officials at the agency said they are "phasing ...
The National Institutes of Health announced on Monday that the biomedical agency will no longer award funding to new grant ...
The Trump administration has overpromised and underdelivered on ending animal cruelty in Dr. Fauci's old stomping grounds.
However, many researchers have raised concerns about the NIH’s capacity to carry out their proposed initiatives following the termination of $1.9 billion in NIH medical research grants, the ...
After FDA's Announcement To Phase Out Animal Testing, NIH Promises Similar Plan To Pursue Human-Relevant Research. Date. 2025-04-30 04:31:13. Share on Facebook; Tweet on Twitter ...
Human organs-on-chips and organoids offer new alternatives to animals for drug development, but there is still a long way to ...
FDA plans to solicit stakeholder input on its implementation of the roadmap, providing sponsors with an opportunity to further inform the actions FDA may take to phase out animal testing. NIH ...
Washington, DC—Last month, both the National Institutes of Health and the US Food and Drug Administration announced plans to phase out the use of animals in scientific research.The Animal Welfare ...
A group of eight lawmakers led by Democratic Rep. Ted Lieu (Calif.) and Republican Rep. Nancy Mace (S.C.) sent a letter to the National Institutes of Health (NIH) on Feb. 10, calling for … ...
The National Institutes of Health (NIH) is following in the FDA’s footsteps—away from animal testing. The NIH plans to establish a new office meant to develop nonanimal methods for biomedical ...
The NIH had been deleting all social media comments containing words like animal, testing, and cruel. Emma Camp | 8.6.2024 4:20 PM Share on Facebook Share on X Share on Reddit Share by email Print ...
NIH used certain keywords, such as “animal” and “testing,” to block comments on its social media posts, which the appeals court said was too restrictive.