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I love seeing the updates about Sandy living her best life, looks like you’re doing a great job with her.
Slowy@lemmy.worldto
Canada@lemmy.ca•Why Canada's food inspection agency won't do interviews as avian flu outbreak in Ontario grows
7·3 months agoWhat? What do you mean?
Or stock it with some small fish to eat the larvae, and plants to keep the water clean, and invite some frogs and dragonflies, maybe some mink or herons to keep the frogs and fish in check
Slowy@lemmy.worldto
Canada@lemmy.ca•Ontario to ban research testing on dogs and cats, premier says
3·6 months agoResearch into building synthetic human bodies would be illegal if you weren’t allowed to test on animals first as the legislation currently stands. The laws on human medical trials often mandate this kind of testing. New vaccines, for example, must be tested on animals (primates) before they are approved by Public Health Agency of Canada. Whether or not that is correct or useful or justified is definitely up for debate, but we would not be able to pursue or utilize any of these advancements or medicines without first changing the regulations. That’s the place to start, for sure.
Slowy@lemmy.worldto
Canada@lemmy.ca•Ontario to ban research testing on dogs and cats, premier says
4·6 months agoAlso, if you are passionate and interested in this kind of thing, consider reaching out to a local institutional Animal Care Committee to see if they have a spot open for a community member! You’d have to sign a confidentiality agreement at this point in time but maybe you would find something like that very interesting. Many institutions have a stipend for the time spent attending meetings and stuff, it can be quite a time sink for just a volunteer position.
Slowy@lemmy.worldto
Canada@lemmy.ca•Ontario to ban research testing on dogs and cats, premier says
2·6 months agoI absolutely agree. There is a push for more openness and transparency in animal research, it is a major initiative of the CCAC for rollout over the next 5 years. There is a lot of fear of animal rights activist groups and litigation or harassment from them that I think is generally unfounded - those incidents are pretty rare. Unfortunately, situations like this with Doug Ford only stoke the fear and protectionist attitudes that need to be broken down… now people in this field feel more targeted and scared and less likely to speak to the public. It’s very counterproductive.
https://ccac.ca/en/animals-used-in-science/transparency/institutional-transparency.html
Slowy@lemmy.worldto
Canada@lemmy.ca•Ontario to ban research testing on dogs and cats, premier says
4·6 months agoDogs are a particularly useful model for heart problems in humans because they naturally get several of the same conditions and diseases humans do. You can try to create genetic variants of mice to have these conditions but it’s not nearly as good as a species that naturally experiences the condition. You may waste hundreds of mouse lives for poor quality research that way.
All studies involving animals require ethical approval involving a detailed assessment of the protocol by a committee that must include veterinarians, managers of the facility (not the lab members but outside of the research team), technicians who work directly with the animals, other researchers doing unrelated work, and a community member otherwise uninvolved in research at all. This is just for the ethical approval, they will also have to go through scientific merit evaluation by a different committee before this step. They must lay out exactly what they are doing and why it is necessary and how they are mitigating pain and distress. They may be under anesthesia for the entire heart attack, and then euthanized without waking up, or receive painkillers and be monitored constantly by a veterinarian. If they don’t do this, the work wont happen, and results wont be publishable either. Without being at that meeting we can’t know the exact technical justification, but there is a very strict process to follow and often everyone has more feelings about it when they are companion animals and they receive a lot of scrutiny.
I’m not all for animal research, some of it is poorly done and wasteful and doesn’t have any practical use. Or the data suffers from human incompetence. But a lot of it does help humans and animals. And there is a lot more tendency to intervene on pain and distress than you’d think - a distressed animal with no pain mitigation is not a good representation for your average human receiving treatment for something at a hospital. Your average local veterinary clinic almost certainly sees far worse cases of neglect and festering horrifying injuries and disease at the hands of incompetent dog owners than a study like this would ever produce.
Slowy@lemmy.worldto
Canada@lemmy.ca•Ontario to ban research testing on dogs and cats, premier says
6·6 months agoYeah not to mention animal testing isn’t just for human medical advancements… a lot of animal testing is to develop treatments for animal diseases, test new diet ingredients (after which the animals are adopted out), etc…
Slowy@lemmy.worldto
Canada@lemmy.ca•Ontario to ban research testing on dogs and cats, premier says
10·6 months agoThere are national regulations covering animal research under the legislating body, the CCAC.
For mice it’s tunnel handling, where you just let them walk into a tube and pick that up. You do need to scruff them to hold them for actual procedures and to examine their teeth and stuff, but it’s really stressful for them to be snatched out of their home by the tail.
For rats it’s just picking them up with your hand over their back and under the armpits and then support the bum with your other hand like you would a kitten or any other small domestic critter. Rats are generally more calm and don’t mind being picked up, mice don’t love it and will jump or run away or bite.
It’s a decapi-cone… for euthanasia (sorry)
Can also be used for blood collection tho
I live for your memes fossilesque
Slowy@lemmy.worldto
pics@lemmy.world•Pelicans on the Bow River in Fish Creek Park. [OC]
3·7 months agoLooks lovely. How are the bugs now?
Tldr - article’s author feels they should have privatized it and cut wages for postal workers a decade ago. Says that turning it from a public service into a crown corp saved it in the 70s-80s but now it has to be fully privatized to work. I disagree personally but Canada Post is definitely in trouble and it seems their union is unfortunately not doing right by the corp or the members.
Slowy@lemmy.worldto
Canada@lemmy.ca•The Heart of the Conservative Election platform is pure MAGA - here's a quote from it
4·10 months agoThey only used the notwithstanding clause to harm trans kids in Saskatchewan…
Yes, if there is no need to collect tissues or anything
Slowy@lemmy.worldto
pics@lemmy.world•it's finally warm enough for Sandy to not need her blanket!
5·1 year agoIs she an old girl? Not a lot of muscle on her butt

I believe it gets a bit trickier because you can use your right to remain silent? They also can’t physically force you to speak the password but they can restrain you and unlock your phone by force.