illlustration of rodent, pigs, fish, rodent

 

 

Steve Durkee, Oregon State University’s administrator of the Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee (IACUC) of the Office of Research Integrity, says,  “Lives are saved because of research animals. Caring people make sure the animals are taken care of.”

See his recent article in Speaking of Research, a publication by an advocacy group that provides accurate information about the importance of animal testing in medical and veterinary science.

 

The media is peeking in through your lab windows?
Opt for fame that depicts your usual safe practices.

Benjamin Franklin’s idea for tenderizing a turkey: electrocute it. Alas, the jolt from two Leyden jars was a shock – to the  body of Franklin. He logged  "Experiment in Electricity that I desire never to repeat."

 

Many famous scientific mishaps do not conjure up images of safety gloves or sound evacuation plans. While  absentminded practices may sometimes have led to discoveries that were interesting,  Oregon State’s advances are based on laboratory practices that are safe (stirred into a test tube of common sense).

Let’s also remember to be aware of how our scientific procedures are depicted in the media.

The Flash was the first comic book hero to obtain super powers in a lab accident - he inhaed "hard water" vapors, and attained super speed.

 

 

Say a popular publication  gets wind of your brilliant hypothesis, and wants an exclusive of you in the moment of invention. In situ, the photographer thinks you’ll look more dashing if your eyelashes show, so “off with those goggles for a sec, please.” Or the reporter thinks it would be cute to get you to cuddle that rat .  .  .

The results: the world – via magazine, newspaper, web, video – receives images of less-than-best practices. Young would-be scientists pooh-pooh their teachers’ precautions. Havoc is unleashed on the world – probably not in the form of a new Beatles song.


 

A German alchemist stored urine in his cellar, going for gold. Putrefied and boiled, it became a waxy, glowing goo that spontaneously burst into flame: phosphorus.  Seventy-five years later, a Swedish chemist developed an industrial method of producing phosphorus;  among his other discoveries were chlorine and the compounds ammonia and prussic acid. That chemist was found dead in his lab, “perhaps owing to his propensity for tasting his own toxic chemicals.”


 

If the media is ringing you up, sweep the floors, check your hair, and review your safety procedures. Contact Environmental Health and Safety for guidance and training needs.

 

 

Historical information from Discover Magazine – 20 Things You Didn’t Know About … , and other sources (- must be true – we  read it on the web).