VA secretary says he will continue agency's controversial experiments on dogs
Veterans Affairs Secretary Robert Wilkie defended the agencys ongoing experiments on dogs Friday and said he would continue to reauthorize them, eight months after Congress passed legislation limiting tests that are opposed by a bipartisan cast of lawmakers and several veterans groups.
Speaking at the National Press Club, 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, 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 Ill continue.
Wilkies comments drew swift backlash from lawmakers who have criticized the experiments, which occur at three VA locations and are invasive and sometimes fatal to the dogs, as cruel and unnecessary.
President 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.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/science/2018/11/09/va-secretary-says-he-will-continue-agencys-controversial-experiments-dogs/?utm_term=.d0c1631dc3f1