USA TODAY US Edition

Fatal experiment­s on dogs are moving ahead at VA

Work continues after change in leadership

- Donovan Slack

WASHINGTON – The Department of Veterans Affairs is pushing forward with invasive and ultimately fatal experiment­s on dogs as part of the VA’s medical research program, according to documents obtained by USA TODAY.

The procedures have sparked outrage and opposition from some veterans’ advocates and prompted strict restrictio­ns from Congress. The VA says the studies could produce discoverie­s that may help veterans suffering from spinal cord or breathing problems.

In Milwaukee, the experiment­s call for researcher­s to remove sections of dogs’ brains to test neurons that control breathing before the animals are killed by lethal injection, research records show.

In Cleveland, tests involve using electrodes on dogs’ spinal cords to measure cough reflexes before and after sev-

ering the cords. In Richmond, Virginia, experiment­s include implanting pacemakers in dogs, then inducing abnormal heart rhythms and running the animals on treadmills to test cardiac function before euthanizin­g them by injection or draining their blood.

VA spokesman Curt Cashour said former Secretary David Shulkin approved the continuati­on of the experiment­s on March 28, the same day he was fired by President Donald Trump.

But Shulkin told USA TODAY on Monday that he “wasn’t asked, nor did I request a review for an approval,” of the dog experiment­s. He said he delegated that responsibi­lity to the agency’s research specialist­s.

Whether he – or his successor – signed off on them is important because a law Trump signed on March 23 requires that dog experiment­s be “directly approved” by the VA secretary to receive agency funding. It doesn’t specify written permission. Cashour said Shulkin gave the go-ahead orally in an earlyafter­noon meeting March 28 with five other top VA executives.

Revelation­s that the tests are set to continue under new VA Secretary Robert Wilkie are sure to trigger a fresh round of debate. The records reviewed by USA TODAY show there are nine active experiment­s at four VA facilities, and more are likely in the future.

VA: ‘Ethically sound’ work

VA officials contend the research could lead to discoverie­s that may help veterans with heart conditions or breathing problems, which can accompany paralysis. Cashour said researcher­s use dogs “only when no other species would provide meaningful results, and the work is ethically sound.” The VA says more than 99 percent of agency studies involve rats or mice.

When asked to cite the most recent breakthrou­ghs credited to the VA dog research, Cashour pointed to the invention of an implantabl­e cardiac pacemaker and procedures that led to the first successful liver transplant. Those experiment­s date to the 1960s, according to the VA’s website.

Lawmakers who have been pushing to end invasive dog experiment­s at the VA say they are disappoint­ed the agency’s new leadership is moving forward with the testing.

“Why there’s this commitment to it, I don’t know because it doesn’t yield any results,” said Rep. Dina Titus, D-Nev., lead co-sponsor of a bill with Rep. Dave Brat, R-Va., that would stop the experiment­s. “It’s not economical­ly sound, they could be looking at new technologi­es, and morally, people just don’t support testing on puppies.”

Although they were glad Trump signed the legislatio­n in March requiring the VA secretary’s approval to fund the experiment­s, Titus, Brat and Rep. Brian Mast, R-Fla., said they will continue pushing to stop them altogether.

“We haven’t executed what we wanted as intent, which was to bring this to an end in its entirety,” said Mast, a veteran who lost both his legs in Afghanista­n and is now a member of the House VA Committee.

The issue started gaining traction with lawmakers in spring 2017, when an advocacy group, White Coat Waste Pro-

“Morally, people just don’t support testing on puppies.” Rep. Dina Titus D-Nev., co-sponsor of bill to stop the research

ject, released documents showing VA researcher­s in Richmond had botched surgeries on dogs. Within months, the House unanimousl­y passed legislatio­n to defund the experiment­s, but the measure stalled in the Senate after VA officials campaigned to stop it.

That campaign included getting support from veterans’ groups, such as The American Legion and Paralyzed Veterans of America. Shulkin published an op-ed in USA TODAY outlining the need for the canine testing.

Before he was fired, Shulkin said his views had changed, and he put a moratorium on new experiment­s beginning without his permission. In March, he ordered that all ongoing studies be reviewed by VA research executives.

Cashour, the VA spokesman, said that review concluded dogs are “the only viable models” for nine experiment­s.

In a letter to lawmakers obtained by USA TODAY, the VA said they include the tests on spinal cords in Cleveland, brains in Milwaukee, the five heart experiment­s in Richmond and another cardiac study in St. Louis.

Four studies were discontinu­ed or paused after the review.

When asked what the new secretary’s views are on dog experiment­s, Cashour pointed to Shulkin’s op-ed from last summer and said the VA’s position is unchanged under Wilkie.

Still, the VA recently commission­ed a $1.3 million study overseen by the National Academy of Sciences to evaluate the need for dogs as research subjects.

Call to suspend experiment­s

White Coat Waste Project, the group that started the campaign to end the experiment­s, says they should be suspended until the study is completed.

“I think it calls into question the integrity of the VA’s intentions if it is going to continue funding and conducting dog experiment­s that it has just paid an organizati­on over a million dollars to scrutinize,” said Justin Goodman, the vice president of advocacy and public policy for the organizati­on.

Some veterans’ groups that supported the experiment­s last year did not return messages, including The American Legion and Vietnam Veterans of America. Paul Rieckhoff, CEO and founder of Iraq and Afghanista­n Veterans of America, said his group still backs the experiment­s as long as they are done properly.

But Paralyzed Veterans of America, which initially expressed support for continuing dog testing, told USA TODAY its position has since evolved.

“We no longer oppose efforts to end VA fatal medical research on dogs,” spokeswoma­n Liz Deakin said.

The group’s former executive director, a Marine veteran who was paralyzed in a vehicle accident as he prepared to deploy to Afghanista­n after the 9/11 attacks, also has rescinded his support.

Sherman Gillums Jr., who is now chief strategy officer at American Veterans, said after reviewing the science and speaking to experts at the VA and elsewhere, he concluded the dog experiment­s haven’t translated to human medical advances for decades.

“It’s time for us to look at better ways and spend money smarter than we’ve done it in the past – especially if it’s going to involve causing pain to the same animals that most veterans need as service dogs,” he told USA TODAY. “To imagine them in cages being tested on with no real outcome that gives anybody hope, it just seems cruel.”

 ?? WHITE COAT WASTE PROJECT ?? White Coat Waste Project says this photo shows mistreatme­nt of dogs in Richmond, Va.
WHITE COAT WASTE PROJECT White Coat Waste Project says this photo shows mistreatme­nt of dogs in Richmond, Va.
 ?? WHITE COAT WASTE PROJECT ?? White Coat Waste Project, a group opposed to taxpayer funding of VA medical experiment­s on dogs, says this photo was taken by a whistleblo­wer at the VA Medical Center in Richmond, Va.
WHITE COAT WASTE PROJECT White Coat Waste Project, a group opposed to taxpayer funding of VA medical experiment­s on dogs, says this photo was taken by a whistleblo­wer at the VA Medical Center in Richmond, Va.

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