Procedures carried out on animals in Northern Ireland, 2022

Posted: by Hannah Hobson on 29/11/23

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Procedures carried out on animals in Northern Ireland, 2022

Latest figures show a decrease in animals used in research in Northern Ireland in 2022

  • Number of procedures on animals in 2022 has decreased by 2.13% to 28,600

  • Mice, fish, rats, and birds account for 90% of all procedures

  • Cats and dogs account for 0.6% of all procedures

  • Sub-threshold and mild procedures account for 56%

  • Northern Ireland represents 1% of UK animal research

The Department of Health in Northern Ireland has released its annual statistics on the number of animals used in scientific, medical and veterinary research in 2022. The figures show that 28,600 procedures were carried out in Northern Ireland in 2022, 2.13% less than in 2021.

90% of the procedures were carried out in mice, fish, rats, and birds, whereas cats and dogs accounted for 0.6% of all procedures in 2022.

While mice are the most common species used (75% of the total), pigs, sheep, and cattle together account for 9.6% of research, reflecting the large amount of agricultural research conducted in Northern Ireland.

In 2022, England, Scotland and Wales carried out 2,761,204 procedures on animals, of which 97% were on mice, fish, rats, and birds. The 28,600 procedures carried out in Northern Ireland represent approximately 1% of animal research across the UK.

What is a procedure?

Any procedure applied to a protected animal for an experimental or other scientific purpose, or for an educational purpose, that may have the effect of causing an animal pain, suffering, distress or lasting harm equivalent to, or higher than, that caused by the introduction of a needle in accordance with good veterinary practice.

How many animals are used?

The number of procedures carried out in a year does not equal the number of animals that have been used in procedures that year. This is because some animals may be used more than once i.e. ‘re-used’, in certain circumstances. These instances are counted as separate, additional, procedures. As a result, the number of procedures is usually slightly higher than the number of animals used. 28,143 animals were used for the first time in 2022.

Specially protected species

Specially protected species refers to cats, dogs, horses, and non-human primates (monkeys) - they are subject to additional protection under Section 5C of the Animal (Scientific Procedures) Act 1986. This means these species can only be used when no other species is suitable. These species were used in 0.6% of all procedures. No monkeys have been used in Northern Ireland since the enactment of the Animals (Scientific Procedures) Act in 1986.

 

Number of Animal Procedures in Northern Ireland in 2022
 

Species

Experimental Procedures

%

Procedures for the Creation & Breeding of Genetically Altered Animals

%

Total Procedures (2022)

%

% change from 2021

Mice

15,355

68.29%

6,045

98.84%

21,400

74.83%

-12.89%

Rats

1,027

4.57%

71

1.16%

1,098

3.84%

54.65%

Cats

79

0.35%

0

0.00%

79

0.28%

Increase from 0

Dogs

89

0.40%

0

0.00%

89

0.31%

45.90%

Domestic fowl

2,350

10.45%

0

0.00%

2,350

8.22%

37.11%

Pig

1,646

7.32%

0

0.00%

1,646

5.76%

699.03%

Sheep

417

1.85%

0

0.00%

417

1.46%

-35.94%

Cattle

611

2.72%

0

0.00%

611

2.14%

16.38%

Fish

800

3.56%

0

0.00%

800

2.80%

18.87%

Other animals

110

0.49%

0

0.00%

110

0.38%

-3.51%

Total

22,484

79%

6,116

21%

28,600

100%

-2.13%

Purpose of procedures

Procedures related to the creation and breeding of genetically altered animals decreased by 13.6% compared to 2021, while experimental procedures increased by 1.5%.

Procedures for creation and breeding involve the breeding of animals whose genes have mutated or have been modified. These animals are used to produce genetically altered offspring for use in experimental procedures but are not themselves used in experimental procedures.

21% (6,116) of all procedures were for the creation or breeding of genetically altered (GA) animals. Of these 6,116 procedures:

  • 100% were for the purpose of maintenance of established lines of genetically altered animals
  • 0% were for the creation of new lines of genetically altered animals

Experimental procedures involve using animals in scientific studies for purposes such as basic research and the development of treatments, safety testing of pharmaceuticals and other substances, education, specific surgical training and education, environmental research and species protection.

79% (22,484) of all procedures were for experimental purposes. This includes basic research, which expands our knowledge of living organisms and the environment; applied research, which addresses the prevention of disease and development of treatments; and regulatory research, which includes studies aimed at ensuring product safety and the effectiveness of pharmaceuticals. Of these 22,484 procedures:

  • 27% were for basic research
  • 58% were for applied research
  • 13% were for protection of natural environmental research
  • 2% were for regulatory research, forensic enquires, and preservation of species research

The top three research areas for basic research were: sensory organs, the immune system, and the respiratory systems. The top three research areas for applied research were: animal welfare, non-regulatory toxicology and ecotoxicology, and human sensory organ disorders.

The use of animals to test tobacco products was banned in the UK in 1997 and it has been illegal to use animals to test cosmetic products in this country since 1998. A policy ban on household testing using animals was introduced in 2010. Since 2013, it has been illegal to sell or import cosmetics anywhere in the EU where the finished product or its ingredients have been tested on animals.
 

Severity of procedures

Severity assessments measure the harm experienced by an animal during a procedure. A procedure can be as mild as an injection, or as severe as an organ transplant.

Severity assessments reflect the peak severity of the entire procedure and are classified into five different categories: 

Sub-threshold: When a procedure did not cause suffering above the threshold for regulation, i.e. it was less than the level of pain, suffering, distress or lasting harm that is caused by inserting a hypodermic needle according to good veterinary practice.

Non-recovery: When the entire procedure takes place under general anaesthetic and the animal is humanely killed before waking up.

Mild: Any pain or suffering experienced was only slight or transitory and minor so that the animal returns to its normal state within a short period of time. For example, the equivalent of an injection or having a blood sample taken.

Moderate: The procedure caused a significant and easily detectable disturbance to an animal’s normal state, but this was not life-threatening. For example, surgery is carried out under general anaesthesia followed by painkillers during recovery.

Severe: The procedure caused a major departure from the animal’s usual state of health and well-being. This would usually include long-term disease processes where assistance with normal activities such as feeding and drinking were required, or where significant deficits in behaviours/activities persist. Animals found dead are commonly classified as severe as pre-mortality suffering often cannot be assessed. Most severe procedures arise in regulatory testing such as the evaluation of the toxicity of drugs.

Sub-threshold and mild procedures account for 56% of all procedures in 2022. 

 

Severity of Animal Procedures in Northern Ireland in 2022
 

Severity

Experimental Procedures

%

Procedures for the Creation & Breeding of Genetically Altered Animals

%

Total Procedures (2022)

%

Change from 2021

Sub-threshold

3,389

15.07%

3,981

65.09%

7,370

25.77%

Non-recovery

139

0.62%

41

0.67%

180

0.63%

=

Mild

6,781

30.16%

1,957

32.00%

8,738

30.55%

Moderate

12,004

53.39%

26

0.43%

12,030

42.06%

Severe

171

0.76%

111

1.81%

282

0.99%

=

Total

22,484

 

6,116

 

28,600

100%

 


Why has the total number of procedures decreased this year?

The total number of animals used in research is affected by many factors. The overall funding for life sciences in the United Kingdom, as well as the relative funding in other countries, will change the amount of science done – a proportion of which will involve animals.

Animals are used alongside other techniques such as cell cultures, human studies and computational models. These methods are used – often in tandem – to answer the key biological questions necessary to understand and treat disease.

Animal research is strictly regulated in the UK. Every procedure, from a simple blood test to major surgery, requires individual, establishment and project licences, as well as approval from an Animal Welfare and Ethical Review Body. Before an animal is used, researchers must show that the knowledge could not be acquired using non-animal methods. 

While the government produces these statistics on an annual basis, more organisations than ever before are openly publishing their own figures on their websites. This move towards greater transparency has been bolstered by the Concordat on Openness on Animal Research in the UK, which has been signed by 126 organisations since it launched in 2014.

See here for historical animal use statistics.

Last edited: 10 January 2024 12:10

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