Animal Alliance of Canada Continues Decades-Long ‘No Pets in Research’ Campaign on World Day for Animals in Labs
- The U.S. Food and Drug Administration revealed a major change in drug testing practices.
- This decision addresses growing public pressure and ethical concerns regarding animal use in research.
- The agency embraces advanced technologies like AI, organoids, and organ-on-a-chip systems for evaluation.
- Shawn O'Connor stated the FDA elevates its commitment through the new Roadmap to Reducing Animal Testing.
- This shift intends to enhance drug safety, speed up assessment, and lower development expenditures.
22 Articles
22 Articles

Animal Alliance of Canada Continues Decades-Long ‘No Pets in Research’ Campaign on World Day for Animals in Labs
TORONTO, April 25, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- In recognition of World Day for Animals in Laboratories (April 24), Animal Alliance of Canada renewed its call to protect animals from the suffering of experimentation.
World Laboratory Animal Day: the extension of a monkey breeding station for research in Provence is a debate
The Primatology Station in Rousset, which will soon become the National Primatology Centre, includes an investment plan of 30 million euros. While activists invoke the need to reduce animal testing, the CNRS affirms the need to maintain the use of primates for certain areas of research while waiting for alternatives.
Mini-organs from the laboratory can replace animal experiments
They could reduce the number of animal experiments in the future: mini-organs bred in the laboratory. For their development, the Dutch immunologist Clevers has now received the animal protection research award from H. Nordwig and S. von Liebe.
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