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Welcome to the PLoS BlogBlogrollWho Links to Us?Setting better standards in reporting - and doing - animal researchSubmitted by Virginia Barbour on Tue, 2007-09-18 14:35.
Last week I gave a talk at the British Association for the Advancement of Science (BA) BA Festival of Science as part of a session organised by CAMARADES, a collaboration that provides a supporting framework for groups involved in the systematic review and meta-analysis of data from animal studies in experimental stroke. The basic premise of the session was that animal experiments, in stroke research at least, are not being done to the level of rigour that we have come to expect of human studies: for example sample size calculations, true randomization to experimental groups and blinding of those who assess outcomes to the experimental group are all rare. The problem is that studies that don’t adhere to such best practice are more likely to come up with positive findings. Other speakers discussed best practice in human studies, the specific problems in investigating stroke, and other perspectives on the problem. The issue I was speaking on is what journals can do here and I summarised this in two points: Trackback URL for this post:http://www.plos.org/cms/trackback/258
( categories: PLoS Medicine )
I couldn´t agree more in the need of better standarisation of studies with animals an the necesity of making everything public. I hope researchers cope with this for the outcomes of these studies (good or bad results) help science grow. ______________________ This seems like a valuable concept. Although prospective IACUC approval is intended to mitigate against inappropriate use of experimental animals, perhaps a comprehensive registry (daunting even to consider!) could add another layer of accountability to the process. If purchasers or breeders of animals were responsible for registering them and reporting ultimate disposition / fate, we might have a database of experimental data (whether or not the results were deemed publishable), as well as some means to monitor the ethical use of these animals. Would you consider each and every animal purchased for experimental use to be "enrolled" in a trial? How would you monitor animals bred in-house? If such a comprehensive enrollment isn't used, how can you ensure that all experiments are included in the database? |
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