dumnonia

Wednesday 26 September 2012

Cardiff University

Cardiff University carried out over 50,000 experiments on animals in 2011. Please contact the university's vice-chancellor to demand that they commit immediately to conduct no experiments on cats or which involve blinding animals or interfering with animals' brains, and that they utilise humane methods to replace all animal experiments.
Dear Professor Riordan,

In the light of the public outcry resulting from publicity surrounding the conduct of vision experiments on cats at Cardiff University, please commit immediately to a policy prohibiting research on cats or any that involves interfering with the senses of all animals. I also urge you on ethical and scientific grounds to replace all animal research currently taking place at the university with humane and effective non-animal methods.

Experiments at Cardiff University involved rearing kittens in complete darkness or sewing their eyelids shut and subjecting them to brain surgery before killing them. This cruel experiment flies in the face of public concern about the use of animals such as cats in such tests and is unjustified scientifically or ethically. The paper published as a result of the work largely replicates the findings of other studies and has no direct relevance to the treatment of human vision problems. To generate much-needed treatments for ambylopia and other conditions, researchers must use human volunteers and tissues, and effective, modern techniques such as fMRI imaging.

I urge Cardiff to utilise effective, modern non-animal techniques in to replace all animal experimentation currently taking place in your institution. Cardiff must lead the way in science and ethics and embrace the techniques of the future, not the cruel and useless methods of the past.

Cardiff University carried out over 50,000 experiments on animals in 2011. Please contact the university's vice-chancellor to demand that they commit immediately to conduct no experiments on cats or which involve blinding animals or interfering with animals' brains, and that they utilise humane methods to replace all animal experiments.

Sunday 23 September 2012

pre-payment meters


Energy customers get switch rights under Ofgem plans

Gas rings on cookerMany households were moved on to prepayment meters after running up debts

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Households with pre-payment meters who owe up to £500 to their energy supplier will be able to switch to cheaper deals with another firm under new measures.
It is part of a push by regulator Ofgem to encourage suppliers to work more effectively with struggling bill-payers and use disconnection as a last resort.
Customers of the biggest six companies are currently able to move only if they have debts of less than £200.
Meanwhile, the energy secretary is due to unveil plans to counter mis-selling.
Under the Ofgem announcement, British Gas, EDF, Eon, SSE, Scottish Power and Npower will allow people on pre-payment meters to switch from 1 November.
It is thought tens of thousands of users will be helped by the move.
There are 320,000 gas and 315,000 electricity customers with pre-payment meters who owe money to their supplier, according to Ofgem.

Start Quote

Ofgem remains determined to ensure suppliers continue to focus on helping consumers manage their energy bills and reduce their debt”
Sarah HarrisonOfgem
The majority racked up the debts when they were given credit by the suppliers and moved to pre-payment meters as a condition of their repayment plans.
Ofgem is due to report figures next week that will show a 59% fall in the number of people disconnected from their gas supply and a 54% drop in electricity disconnections, partly as a result of people being given more time to repay debts.
However, the average amount of debt people are repaying on their gas accounts rose to £371 in 2011, up from £339 the previous year.
Meanwhile, the average electricity debt fell slightly to £357.
Sarah Harrison, senior partner for sustainable development at Ofgem, said: "We welcome the significant falls in the number of households being disconnected, but Ofgem remains determined to ensure suppliers continue to focus on helping consumers manage their energy bills and reduce their debt."
People power
Ofgem will also be given powers to help customers gain compensation if they have lost money owing to energy companies breaking industry rules, under the government proposals to be unveiled by Energy Secretary Mr Davey at the Lib Dem conference.
Ofgem already has the power to penalise energy firms heavily when they break the terms of their licences, for example by mis-selling products or overcharging, but the money from those fines goes straight to the Treasury.
Ed DaveyEd Davey is to outline the government help at the Lib Dem conference
The new powers will allow Ofgem to force suppliers to pay compensation directly to their customers, in cases where a voluntary agreement cannot be reached.
They also include a £5m fund for schemes which bring local people together to switch energy supplier en masse in a bid to secure lower bills.
The cash will go to the best initiatives drawn up by local councils and community groups, with Mr Davey warning that without them the best deals were reserved for "well-heeled internet savvy" consumers.
He was inspired to offer the funding after being present at the launch of such a move in Cornwall - set up jointly by a local authority, the NHS, a trade union, the Eden Project and a brewery.

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Thursday 13 September 2012

poor care'


Bristol Children's Hospital to 'learn' from incidents of 'poor care'

Rachael Puaca and Christopher Casey Jack Casey's parents said aftercare was "not acceptable" at the hospital

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Bristol Children's Hospital has defended its record after a series of complaints over care of child cardiac patients.
It follows the publication of a report earlier this week which partly blamed staff shortages on the death of a seven-year-old boy.
The parents of other children who were treated there have said they also received poor care.
A spokesman said the hospital would "learn" from the incidents.
The report, published on Monday, said Luke Jenkins, seven, of Cardiff, had been expected to make a recovery after heart surgery at Bristol Children's Hospital. But he suffered cardiac arrest and died, partly due to staff shortages, the report found.
After its publication parents of other children contacted the BBC to say they had also received poor care at the hospital.
Tiffany White, from Gloucester, said there were poor hygiene standards at the hospital shortly before her son Oscar Wilcox died from a complex cardiac condition.
'Laying in his own vomit' Ms White said: "He'd be sick all over himself. There were many occasions when he'd be laying in his own sick and crying.
"I wondered why no-one would come in and help him."
The parents of three-year-old Jack Casey from Bridgend said the lining of his lungs was accidentally punctured as he was having fluid drained from his chest when he was seven months old.
His mother, Rachael Puaca, also said hygiene was poor, and she found him lying "in a dirty nappy, laying in his own vomit with no nurse by him" when he was in an intensive care unit.
"If my son ever needs any heart surgery he will never go to Bristol Children's Hospital again," said Ms Puaca. "The surgeon was fantastic, the consultant was fantastic but the whole aftercare was just not acceptable."
A spokesman said it could not comment on Jack Casey's case because of the threat of possible legal action.
Dr Sean O'Kelly, medical director of University Hospitals Bristol NHS Foundation Trust, said: "I'm profoundly disappointed and upset to hear these stories of poor care from patients and their families.
"We always strive to provide the highest standards of care and it's disappointing when we don't, so we will learn from this."

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Wednesday 12 September 2012

The chicken went to takeaway restaurants and kebab shops in Bristol, as well as surrounding towns and cities as far afield as Swindon, Cardiff, Newport and Swansea.


Leading vet criticises ritual slaughter of animals


Halal abattoir in Oudeschoot, NetherlandsProf Reilly says if there is no alternative to non-stun slaughter, then it ought to be kept to a minimum

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A leading vet has criticised the "unacceptable" rise in the number of animals killed in ritual slaughter.
Ritual slaughter is lawful in the UK and the EU to satisfy the dietary requirements of Jews and Muslims.
Prof Bill Reilly, former president of the British Veterinary Association, said estimates suggested more animals were slaughtered than was necessary.
The Food Standards Agency (FSA) said its own figures showed most animals were stunned before being killed.
The FSA conducted a survey into animal welfare in slaughterhouses in September.
A spokesman said: "The results indicate that the number of animals not stunned prior to slaughter is relatively low, accounting for 3% of cattle, 10% of sheep and goats, and 4% of poultry.
"They also show that the majority of animals destined for the halal trade in both the red and white meat sectors are stunned before slaughter."
The FSA said full details of the survey would be published ahead of a discussion at a board meeting on 22 May.
'Not acceptable'
But Prof Reilly, writing in the Veterinary Record, said: "In my view, the current situation is not acceptable and, if we cannot eliminate non-stunning, we need to keep it to the minimum.
"This means restricting the use of halal and kosher meat to those communities that require it for their religious beliefs and, where possible, convincing them of the acceptability of the stunned alternatives."
He suggested some abattoirs might be refusing to stun animals simply to cut costs.
UK legislation allows halal (Muslim) or schecita (Jewish) "non-stun" slaughter as long as it does not cause "unnecessary suffering".
But Prof Reilly said he witnessed schecita slaughter in the 1970s and he wrote: "The distress, fear and pain were there for all to see in the abattoir."
Prof Reilly said his own estimates suggested around two million animals, mostly poultry, were killed in the UK each year without stunning for the orthodox Jewish community.
Halal meat now accounted for 25% of the entire UK meat market, Prof Reilly added. Anecdotal evidence suggested that almost half of lambs destined for slaughter were killed without prior stunning.
Joyce D'Silva, from the charity Compassion in World Farming (CWF), said: "Judaism and Islam believe that animals are creatures of God; science tells us that they are sentient beings, who can suffer.
"If you hold either view, or both, then your principle concern must be to ensure the least possible suffering for the animal concerned.
"Therefore animals should be handled with care and stunned effectively before their throats are cut in order to minimise their distress and pain.
"Consumers should be able to tell how the animals they eat are reared, transported and slaughtered," he added.

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Thursday 6 September 2012

South Gloucestershire Hawk and Owl Trust


Stolen Hawk and Owl Trust mobile unit recovered after eBay sighting

The mobile education trailer was towed from a driveway in Stapleton in May 2011

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A Bristol conservation group has had its stolen mobile education trailer returned after its chairman saw it for sale on eBay.
The unit belonging to the South Gloucestershire Hawk and Owl Trust

Owls in the United Kingdom

Barn owl huntingSix species of owl occur naturally in the United Kingdom, while controversy rages over whether a seventh, the European Eagle Owl, is living wild in England as a result of natural migration from the Continent, or as a result of escaping from bird collections.
 was stolen in Stapleton in May 2011.
It contained display boards, show equipment and thousands of leaflets.
Chairman Paul Golledge spotted it on the internet auction site and contacted Avon and Somerset Police who launched an investigation.
The trailer was subsequently recovered earlier in the year and it has now been returned to the trust.
Mobile education trailerA police spokesman said no-one had been charged over the matter.
The trailer had been stripped of its branding so it has been refurbished and will resume its role in transporting the group's promotional tools to shows across the West.
Mr Golledge said the trust had been "devastated" when it was stolen.
He said: "We are incredibly grateful to Avon and Somerset Constabulary for its dogged detection work in solving this crime. It means the important work of the trust can continue unhindered."
Vice-chairman Stuart Robson said he was "delighted" to celebrate the trailer's return and added: "Our education unit enables us to explain to people the work we do and why we do it.
"It also gives them the opportunity to get involved with us as conservation volunteers."
Hawk and Owl Trust volunteers work for wild birds of prey and their habitats.
The mobile education trailer is used at festivals, shows and events to help promote the trust's work while providing information.