Wednesday, April 30, 2025

 

NIH’s initiative to prioritize human-based research a ‘big win for animals,’ says doctors group




Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine





WASHINGTON, D.C.—The nonprofit Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine, which promotes the use of human-based research to improve health and replace animal use, enthusiastically supports the U.S. National Institutes of Health’s landmark commitment to prioritize innovative, human-based methods, like organoids, tissue chips, computational models, and real-world data analyses, while reducing animal use. 

“NIH Director Jay Bhattacharya’s historic announcement that the NIH will prioritize human-based science is not only a big win for animals, but also for human health,” says Catharine E. Krebs, PhD, medical research program manager for the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine. “We’ve known for a long time that animal experiments don’t reliably translate to human health outcomes, coming at a grave cost to patients in need of better treatments, to innovation, and to animal lives.” 

Animal experiments are poorly representative of human health and disease and rarely predictive of drug efficacy, safety, and toxicity in humans. The reliance on animals is a direct contributor to high failure rates in the drug development pipeline, wasting billions of dollars each year and putting trial participants and patients at risk by failing to capture unsafe or ineffective products. As a result, untold numbers of dogs, cats, monkeys, mice, rats, and other animals are bred and used in painful and deadly research and testing procedures—estimated to be greater than 100 million per year in the United States. 

Innovative 3D in vitro technologies like tissue chips, organoids, and bioprinting, as well as advanced computational modeling and real-world data analyses, are already being used to replace animals in a variety of applications, including disease modeling, precision medicine, and regulatory toxicology. These pioneering methods, also called new approach methodologies (NAMs), use human cells, tissue, and data to replicate human-specific biology and disease characteristics and have enormous potential to revolutionize medical research and testing. 

The announcement details several agency actions to better prioritize innovative human-centered research, including establishment of the Office of Research Innovation, Validation, and Application (ORIVA) to coordinate NIH-wide efforts to develop, validate, and scale up the use of nonanimal approaches and serve as a hub for interagency coordination and regulatory translation. To promote the broader use of nonanimal approaches, ORIVA will expand funding, training, and infrastructure and help raise awareness of their value in translational success. New funding opportunities will include evaluation criteria that assess methods based on their suitability for the research question, context of use, translatability, and human relevance—factors which should help improve review quality and ensure impartiality toward different methods. To also aid in the review of nonanimal research proposals, grant review staff will participate in mitigation training to address bias toward animal studies—a phenomenon called animal methods bias—and review groups will include nonanimal method expertise. Lastly, the NIH will publicly report on research spending annually to measure progress toward reduction of funding for animal studies and increase for human-based approaches.  

This significant shift builds on steady progress at the agency toward the broader development and use of nonanimal, human-based methods. In 2024, the NIH accepted comprehensive recommendations on catalyzing nonanimal approaches made by an advisory group, including many measures reflected in the announcement, like supporting nonanimal method infrastructure and training and raising awareness of the value of nonanimal approaches. In conjunction, a new program called Complement-ARIE was launched, aimed at speeding up the development, standardization, validation, and use of such methods.  

“NIH investment in nonanimal alternatives has steadily increased over the last couple decades, but as much as half of the agency’s budget still goes toward animal use,” says Krebs. “Today’s announcement is exactly what the medical research enterprise needs to generate real change toward more ethical and effective science.” 

This historic news comes on the heels of the groundbreaking April 10 announcement from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to phase out animal testing requirements for monoclonal antibodies and other drugs. These changes are popular among the public: In a recent poll, 85% of Americans agreed that “animal experimentation should be phased out in favor of more modern research methods.”  

Physicians Committee experts have been working toward these changes for many years, advocating for the prioritization of human-centered research and the public reporting of funds going toward animal- and nonanimal-based studies, providing critical feedback regarding challenges and investment opportunities for NAMs, and leading an international collaboration of researchers and advocates aimed at addressing animal methods bias. Earlier this month, the Physicians Committee and 324 scientists, physicians, and other health professionals sent a letter to Director Bhattacharya, asking him to lead the agency in the important shift away from the use of animals in medical research in favor of human-based science. 

 

Nearly one-quarter of e-Scooter injuries involved substance impaired riders



University of California - Los Angeles Health Sciences
E-Scooter Crash 

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Nearly 25% of patients hospitalized for scooter-related injuries wre using substances such as alcohol, opioids, marijuana and cocaine.

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Credit: Joann Elmore, UCLA Health




FINDINGS

Analyzing data from the 2016-2021 National Inpatient Sample, UCLA researchers found that 25% of 7350 patients hospitalized for scooter-related injuries were using substances such as alcohol, opioids, marijuana and cocaine when injured. Published in The American Surgeon, the study also notes that overall scooter-related hospitalizations during the 5-year period jumped more than eight-fold, from 330 to 2705. In addition, the risk of traumatic brain injuries among the substance use group was almost double that of the non-impaired patients. Substance use also increased hospital costs by an average $4,600 per patient.

IMPACT

While the rise in e-scooter’s popularity has coincided with a jump in related injuries, the role of substance use in those injuries had not been previously explored. Given the rising prevalence of substance use in scooter-related injuries, the authors say strategies such as helmet mandates, substance use prevention and infrastructure improvements are needed to mitigate these injury risks.

COMMENT

“In today’s landscape of rapidly growing scooter use, our study highlights how substance use among riders has played a significant role in the rise of severe, costly, and largely preventable injuries,” said Dr. Areti Tillou, vice chair for education in the UCLA Department of Surgery and the study’s senior author. “Our study was limited to hospitalized patients and thus likely underestimates the current rate of injuries. As urban centers continue to expand shared micromobility systems, the growing prevalence of substance use among scooter riders raises serious concerns about rider safety. These findings underscore the urgent need to strengthen safety regulations, enforce helmet use, and reduce substance use among scooter riders to prevent injuries and promote safer, more sustainable urban transportation.”

AUTHORS

Study co-authors are Hannah Benharash, Nam Yong Cho, Troy Coaston, Sara Sakowitz, Dr. Saad Mallick, and Giselle Porter.

 

Media Contact

Enrique Rivero

310-267-7120

erivero@mednet.ucla.edu

Parents take a year to ‘tune in’ to their child’s feelings about starting school, research suggests



University of Cambridge




A team of psychologists led by the University of Cambridge have found that it takes parents about a year, on average, to attune to their child’s attitudes towards school once they start education.

In fact, by Year 1, parental perceptions of how a child feels about school most closely match responses given by the child when they were in Reception class a year earlier.

Scientists say that parents can get a “misleading picture” of a child’s introduction to education, especially if children only talk about school when they have a bad day. 

Now, researchers have teamed up with writer Anita Lehmann and artist Karin Eklund to create a picture book designed to help parents better understand their child's experiences and emotional state during that crucial first year of school.

How I Feel About My Schoolpublished today by Routledge, is based on findings from the Ready or Not Study led by Prof Claire Hughes at Cambridge’s Department of Psychology.

The study included two waves of interviews with over 200 children in Reception and Year 1, from over 100 different UK primary schools.

Along with a series of tasks that measure cognitive skills and wellbeing, the children were guided through simple, emoji-based questionnaires about how different aspects of the school day make them feel.

A parent or caregiver (predominantly mothers) also completed interviews about their child that covered everything from mood to sociability and attitudes to school.

In Reception class, Hughes and team found little affinity between children’s thoughts and feelings about school and how their caregivers believed they felt about it.

By Year 1, levels of agreement between children and adults had more than doubled on average, although significant gaps remained. Year 1 responses from parents often matched those given by their children the previous year.

Over both years, researchers found the biggest gaps between the outlooks of parent and child were parents overestimating how happy children are in the classroom, and underestimating how happy children feel in the playground.

“We found a clear and wide gap between how parents think their children feel about the first year of school, and how children actually feel about school,” said Prof Claire Hughes, Deputy Director of Cambridge’s Centre for Child, Adolescent and Family Research.

“Our research shows that it typically takes parents a year to tune into their child’s experiences of school. By Year 1, parents are often only just catching up to where their children were a year earlier.” 

“We wanted to create a book that can help parents connect with their child’s feelings about school much earlier,” said Hughes. “Parents get a misleading picture if children are motivated to talk about their school day only when something has upset them.”

The new picture book follows four young children through a day at school, from arriving at the gates through to playtime, quiet time and show-and-tell, with incidents along the way including lunchtime disagreements and classroom collaborations.

The book’s characters display a variety of behaviours and traits to allow children with a range of personality types to recognise themselves, say researchers. The book has built-in prompts to get children talking more meaningfully about their school day, and how it left them feeling.

“We want to normalise difference. Kids have ups and downs in a day for lots of reasons,” said Hughes. “There can be a tendency to over-medicalise sadness, but getting through a school day is a big deal for children, and problems are a natural part of that.”

Initial Ready or Not findings came out last year in the British Journal of Educational Psychology, as well as in a book: The Psychology of Starting School.

Further findings, just published in the journal Developmental Psychology, suggest that children’s wellbeing at school declines on average between Reception and Year 1. This is perhaps unsurprising for a UK cohort, says Hughes, as Reception is play-based, whereas reading and writing requirements begin in Year 1, so children start to experience the demands of the curriculum.

“A closer understanding of how a child feels about starting school will allow parents to gauge wellbeing and help their child adapt as key stages kick in,” said Hughes. “Happy children are better learners, and the first years of school can set the tone.”   

The published findings from Ready or Not show that greater wellbeing as reported by the child in Reception class predicted higher levels of “self-concept” – how confident a child feels about their ability to read, write and count – by time they are in Year 1.

Hughes points to other UK studies suggesting that children who say they enjoy school at age six tend to achieve better academic outcomes by age sixteen, including higher GCSE exam grades.

“If children can have a positive couple of years at the beginning of school and we can really protect that time for building up their enthusiasm and their confidence, then when things do get more serious, the children are willing to embrace it,” said Hughes.

“We hope the picture book will promote conversations about what happened at lunchtime or in the playground, giving parents a better understanding of their child’s enjoyment of school, and building up an emotional literacy for children.” 

 

Higher cigarette taxes may improve childhood survival


TOBACCO SHOULD BE BANNED AS  A PESTICIDE

Karolinska Institutet
Márta Radó 

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Márta Radó

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Credit: Photo: Gunilla Sonnebring




A higher tax on cigarettes in low and middle-income countries can help to reduce child mortality, especially amongst the poorest children, a new study led by researchers at Karolinska Institutet and published in The Lancet Public Health suggests.

The World Health Organisation (WHO) recommends a tax of at least 75 percent on the retail price of cigarettes, but most countries impose a much lower tax than that.

If all 94 countries included in the study had raised their cigarette tax to the level recommended by the WHO, the lives of over 280,000 children could potentially have been saved in a single year,” says Márta Radó, principal investigator at the Department of Medical Epidemiology and Biostatistics at Karolinska Institutet in Sweden. “Not only that, it would narrow the socioeconomic gap in child mortality rates in line with the UN’s sustainable development goals.”

The study examined the link between cigarette taxes and under-five mortality among different income groups in 94 low and middle-income countries.

Socioeconomic differences

The study is based on publicly accessible data from the WHO, the World Bank and the UN Inter-agency Group for Child Mortality Estimation (UN IGME) covering the years between 2008 and 2020. The researchers analysed the links between child mortality and different types of cigarette tax, such as specific excise duty (a fixed tax per packet regardless of sale price), ad valorem duty (a percentage of the product’s value), import duties and VAT.

Their calculations suggest that higher cigarette taxes can improve childhood survival among all socioeconomic groups, while reducing differences in survival between the richest and poorest groups. Excise duties had the most salient effect.

“Smoking related morbidity and mortality among children is disproportionately high in low and middle-income counties,” says lead author Olivia Bannon, researcher at Karolinska Institutet and Linköping University in Sweden. “An increase in cigarette tax is a vital policy measure that can improve the health of children worldwide, especially in the most vulnerable groups.”

Overcoming the obstacles

 “We know that the tobacco industry has a number of well-established tactics to undermine, disrupt and delay the implementation of effective tobacco control measures globally, including increasing taxation. Our study provides compelling evidence for governments to overcome tobacco industry interference and  other obstacles to implement higher taxes on tobacco in LMICs.” Says Dr Rado.

The study was conducted in close collaboration with Jasper Been, paediatrician and researcher at Erasmus MC (the Netherlands) and researchers at McGill University (Canada) and Imperial College London (the UK). It was financed by Forte (the Swedish Research Council for Health, Working Life and Welfare), Riksbankens Jubileumsfond and the EU Horizon 2020 Programme. There are no reported conflicts of interest.

Publication: “Cigarette taxation and socioeconomic inequalities in under-five mortality across 94 low- and middle-income countries”, Olivia S. Bannon, Jasper V. Been, Sam Harper, Anthony A. Laverty, Christopher Millett, Frank J. van Lenthe, Filippos T. Filippidis, Márta K. Radó, The Lancet Public Health, online 29 April 2025. 

 

New study shows how ‘marine revolution’ shaped ocean life




University of Texas at Austin
Globorotalia tumida 

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A scanning electron micrograph of Globorotalia tumida, a calcareous planktic foraminifera. This specimen was collected from IODP Site U1559 in the South Atlantic Ocean

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Credit: Chris Lowery/ The University of Texas at Austin Jackson School of Geosciences.





Between 252 and 66 million years ago, the ocean underwent a revolution.

That’s when plankton with calcium carbonate skeletons colonized the open ocean. When they died, their remains fell like snow over large parts of the seafloor. The abundance of their skeletons over time changed the marine landscape, leading to unique rock formations and vast deposits of carbonate rock.

This buildup of carbonate minerals was an important part of the Mesozoic Marine Revolution, or MMR — a period of transformation in Earth’s oceans that helped set the stage for today’s modern marine ecosystem.

According to a new study led by researchers at The University of Texas at Austin and published in the Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, the change in calcium carbonate dynamics in the ocean appears to have influenced the evolutionary trajectory of tiny but mighty sea creatures: foraminifera.

Foraminifera — or forams for short — have called Earth’s oceans home for hundreds of millions of years and are an important part of the food chain, making up 50% of biomass in deep sea ecosystems. But on the individual level, forams are very small. Each one is just a single cell surrounded by a shell-like skeleton.

Forams can make their skeletons out of different materials, including sediments and organic matter. The researchers found that after the MMR, calcareous forams — which build their shells by secreting calcium carbonate — flourished, going on to become the dominant type of foram living today.

The study’s lead author Katherine Faulkner, who conducted the research when she was an undergraduate student at UT, said that in addition to shedding light on foram diversity through time, the findings could help researchers learn about how other forms of marine life responded to swings in ocean chemistry over geologic time.

“Foraminifera are these very abundant organisms and they can actually tell us a little more about what other organisms that also have calcium carbonate structures might have been doing during this time interval,” Faulkner said.

Faulkner is now a graduate student at the University of Oxford.

In their study, Faulkner and her collaborators tracked the diversity of forams over the past 541 million years — a period known as the Phanerozoic — analyzing how different types of forams fared during big changes in Earth’s environment. This included multiple bouts of ocean acidification and five mass extinctions. The data on foram diversity came from a previously compiled index. The researchers compared this data against changes in ocean chemistry over time.

Before the MMR, calcareous foram diversity was particularly sensitive to environmental changes, with these forams having extinction and origination rates on an order of magnitude higher than other forams. These changing rates reflected big contemporaneous changes in ocean chemistry, rather than longer term trends.

After the onset of the MMR, however, calcareous foram diversity steadily increased while their extinction rates declined. What’s more, even when short-term changes in ocean chemistry during the Cenozoic Era led to extinctions, the diversity of calcareous forams rapidly recovered once conditions improved. The researchers attribute the rebound to the buffering effect of the increased amounts of calcium carbonate on the ocean floor.

“Foram diversity stabilizes more than I expected it would, especially with all the huge Cenozoic climate changes,” said co-author Rowan Martindale, an associate professor at the UT Jackson School of Geosciences’ Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences. “It’s impressive to me how that switch in the Mesozoic really transforms how forams react to changes in the ocean.”

The research highlights the variable ways forams have responded to changes in ocean chemistry over time and how the influx of calcium carbonate during the MMR helped calcareous forams weather environmental swings, said co-author Chris Lowery, a Research Assistant Professor at the Jackson School’s Institute for Geophysics.

“You’ve got big changes in pH at the K/Pg boundary and the Paleocene Eocene Thermal Maximum, but there’s no real extinction [in forams] that we can observe in the latter record and certainly no big changes in [shell]-type through time,” he said. “It seems like forams on this scale are resistant to changes in ocean chemistry.”

A light microscope image of two Ammobaculites, an agglutinated genus of foraminifera, from just about the Cretaceous/Paleogene Boundary at Trim Cane Creek in Starkville, MS.

Credit

Chris Lowery/ The University of Texas at Austin Jackson School of Geosciences.