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Chimpanzees used for medical testing 'show signs of torture'

http://www.independent.co.uk/environment/nature/chimpanzees-used-for-medical-testing-show-signs-of-torture-883257.html

By Steve Connor, Science Editor

Saturday, 2 August 2008

Chimps show symptoms of post-traumatic stress

Chimpanzees subjected to medical experiments suffer similar psychiatric
symptoms to those shown by tortured humans, according to a study to be
released next week.

An assessment of the behaviour of 116 chimpanzees who have been involved in
animal research found that 95 per cent display at least one of the
distinctive patterns of behaviour that people show when suffering from
post-traumatic stress disorder.

The chimps now live in a primate sanctuary in the United States but their
unusual behaviour is still causing concern years after they were released
from the animal-research laboratories in which they were experimented upon.

The findings, which will be made public at an international primate
conference in Edinburgh on Monday, will be used to press for a Europe-wide
ban on the use of great apes in medical research. Although experiments on
chimps were banned in Britain in 1998, they are still legal in the rest of
Europe even though the two research facilities where chimps had been kept
have recently closed. However, in the US there is no such ban and about
1,200 chimps are still kept for medical research. Hope Ferdowsian, an
American doctor who has treated torture patients from around the world, said
that it is clear that chimps suffer many of the extreme psychological
conditions shown by human torture victims.

"There are obvious differences between species but it's obvious that these
chimps are suffering chronically," Dr Ferdowsian said.

The study involved asking the staff at the animal sanctuary in Louisiana to
itemise the types of behaviour patterns shown by the chimps. The scientists
then assessed the reports against criteria used to assess human patients.

Dr Ferdowsian said that as well as the signs of post-traumatic stress
disorder, more than 80 per cent of the chimps had the symptoms of anxiety
and at least half showed the sort of behaviour associated with depression.
"The patterns of behaviour we are seeing in these chimps are not normal and
not seen in the wild," Dr Ferdowsian said.

The types of behaviour shown by the chimps included "floating limb"
displays said to be an expression of disassociating their body with the real
world, which is much like the disassociation behaviour seen in people with
post-traumatic stress disorder. Other behaviours were avoidance of certain
areas of habitat, such as indoor enclosures, anger outbursts, failure to
socialise and inability to sleep.

 
 
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