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Prisoners as laboratory animals
by Michael Mills and Norval Morris S tateville Prison in Illinois might have been created by a Hollywood set designer. George Raft and his fellows in the romantic prison movies of the 1940s would recognize its massive walls looming over the empty countryside, the armed guard towers that prickle the horizon and the regimented flower beds at the front ...
Michael, Mills, Norval, Morris
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Handbook on Laboratory Animals
Science, 1944To the Editor:— The Universities Federation for Animal Welfare is compiling a handbook on the care and management of laboratory animals. The aim is to provide a concise, practical manual which will facilitate the uniform and humanitarian care of the smaller laboratory species, and it is in no way intended to produce a comprehensive monograph for each ...
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Aging in the laboratory animal
Maturitas, 1984Aging in the laboratory animal is studied not only to increase knowledge of its fundamental aspects but also for comparative purposes. The aging process must be regarded as a dynamic process which can be studied in the mammalian species by essentially two types of investigation: cross-sectional and longitudinal studies.
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Journal of Occupational & Environmental Medicine
Abstract Ranging from mild respiratory allergy to anaphylaxis, laboratory animal allergy (LAA) can adversely affect an individual’s health and career. LAA can be prevented through a hierarchy of controls. However, workers remain at risk as many, if not most, workplaces have not fully adopted needed prevention practices.
Gregg M. Stave +5 more
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Abstract Ranging from mild respiratory allergy to anaphylaxis, laboratory animal allergy (LAA) can adversely affect an individual’s health and career. LAA can be prevented through a hierarchy of controls. However, workers remain at risk as many, if not most, workplaces have not fully adopted needed prevention practices.
Gregg M. Stave +5 more
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Journal of the American Medical Association, 1943
To the Editor:— As a result of recent correspondence with a number of workers engaged in experiments on animals, I have become aware that there is a strong and widespread desire for experience to be pooled so as to enable the maximum of consideration to be shown for the feelings of laboratory animals.
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To the Editor:— As a result of recent correspondence with a number of workers engaged in experiments on animals, I have become aware that there is a strong and widespread desire for experience to be pooled so as to enable the maximum of consideration to be shown for the feelings of laboratory animals.
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The human–animal bond with laboratory animals
Lab Animal, 2009In the author's experience, a bond--whether intentional or not--is often established between humans and animal research subjects. Behavioral theorists suggest that human-animal relationships can take several different forms. The author discusses several occasions in which she perceived one type of relationship with a research animal and was later ...
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