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Veterans Affairs secretary vows to continue controversial experiments on dogs despite Congress backlash

Robert Wilkie says research, which includes severing dogs' spinal cords, will continue 'until somebody tells me it does not help'

Karin Brulliard
Saturday 10 November 2018 17:21 GMT
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Veterans Affairs (VA) secretary Robert Wilkie has defended the agency’s ongoing experiments on dogs and said he would continue to “reauthorise” them, eight months after Congress passed legislation limiting tests that are opposed by a bipartisan cast of lawmakers and several veterans’ groups.

Mr Wilkie rejected calls to end research that he said led to the invention in the 1960s of the cardiac pacemaker and the discovery in the late 1990s of a treatment for deadly cardiac arrhythmias. These days, he said, some of the testing is focused on spinal cord injuries.

“I love canines,” Mr Wilkie said. “But we have an opportunity to change the lives of men and women who have been terribly hurt. And until somebody tells me that that research does not help in that outcome, then I’ll continue.”

Mr Wilkie’s comments drew swift backlash from politicians who have criticised the experiments, which occur at three VA locations and are invasive and sometimes fatal to the dogs, as cruel and unnecessary.

President Donald Trump, in March, signed a spending bill that included language restricting such tests and legislation has been proposed that would end all canine research at VA.

“Having sustained catastrophic injuries on the battlefield, which included the loss of both my legs, I am acutely aware of the vital role dogs play in helping troops recover from war’s physical and psychological tolls,” said Florida’s Republican congressman Brian Mast, an Army veteran and co-sponsor of the legislation. “The VA has not executed what we wanted as intent, which is to bring this to an end in its entirety, so we will keep up the pressure.”

The restrictions approved by Congress require any canine testing be “directly approved” by the secretary. Last week, USA Today reported the agency has continued to conduct research on dogs in Milwaukee, Wisconsin; Cleveland, Ohio; and Richmond, Virginia. In Cleveland, the experiments involve severing dogs’ spinal cords and testing their cough reflexes, the newspaper reported.

An animal rights group, the White Coat Waste Project, first drew attention to the testing in early 2017, sparking opposition in Congress and among some veterans’ organisations. The VA, with the backing of other veterans’ and medical groups, pushed back against the mounting criticism, with then-secretary David Shulkin, a physician, calling the research critical “because of the distinct physical and biological characteristics humans and dogs share that other species do not.”

Which VA secretary approved the ongoing testing, however, is a point of contention. Before Mr Trump fired him in March, Mr Shulkin told an interviewer he was “not a strong believer” in the testing and last week he tweeted he “remain[s] opposed towards any new dog research”. But an agency spokesman said on Friday that Mr Shulkin had verbally approved the continuation of the research the day he was fired.

Regardless of who signed off on the research, Mr Wilkie made clear that his support remained firm. He said the agency uses 92 dogs in experiments, adding, “Every day, 2,000 dogs are euthanised in this country.”

Justin Goodman, vice president of advocacy and public policy for the White Coat Waste Project, said it was “disconcerting that secretary Wilkie was brought in to clean up the VA and yet he is doubling down on a program that has continued to fail veterans, taxpayers and dogs.”

The Washington Post

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