General CARC Information
In accordance with various sponsoring and public regulatory
agencies, this committee regularly reviews all matters relating to animals
for research and teaching purposes. The committee must assure that the
use of animals considers both scientific and humane values. Recommendations
are made to the Division of Natural Sciences dean regarding the adequacy
of the animal resource facilities and programs in conforming to all applicable
laws, regulations, and guidelines.
There are many regulations and policies that affect the
use of animals in research, teaching, and testing programs. Accordingly,
the university has both legal and ethical obligations to review all use
of animals on or off campus. This includes observation, contact, and manipulation
of living or dead animals, or significantly altering their environments.
University of California Policy, the Animal Welfare Act (and its 1985 amendments),
and the Public Health Service (PHS) Policy on Humane Care and Use of Laboratory
Animals (otherwise known as the National Institutes of Health (NIH) Policy),
require appointment of an Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee (IACUC)
to oversee the animal care and use program. The IACUC for this campus is
named The Chancellor's Animal Research Committee (CARC). Federal funding
agencies require IACUCs to approve proposals for the care and use of animals
before funds will be awarded. An institution's failure to comply with these
regulations and policies may lead to various actions, including the termination
of support for all projects.
As the Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee (IACUC)
at UCSC, CARC's functions are clearly defined:
- Review of all proposed uses of vertebrates for research,
teaching, and testing to ensure that research is appropriate and animals
are treated humanely;
- Review and development of institutional policy on care
and use of laboratory animals;
- Semiannual inspection and review of UCSC's animal facilities
and program for the humane care and use of animals using the current edition
of the NIH Guide for the Care and Use of Laboratory Animals (Guide)
as a basis for evaluation;
- Support the attending veterinarians' functions;
- Review of specific concerns or complaints about animal
care or use.;
- Present recommendations to the institutional official
(the dean of the Division of Natural Sciences) regarding all aspects of
UCSC's animal care and use program. Significant deficiencies in the institution's
program must be identified, and the institution must adhere to an approved
plan and schedule for correction of the deficiencies;
- Authority to suspend any activity involving the use of
animals which is not being conducted in accordance with the current edition
of the Guide standards, or with applicable laws, regulations, or
institutional policies.
The "US Government Principles for the Utilization
and Care of Vertebrate Animals Used in Testing, Research, and Training"
were developed by the US Government's interagency research animal committee.
Both PHS Policy and university policy require that all uses of animals
conform to these principles:
- The transportation, care, and use of animals should be
in accordance with the Animal Welfare Act (7 U.S.C. 2131 et. seq.) and
other applicable federal laws, guidelines, and policies.
- Procedures involving animals should be designed and performed
with due consideration of their relevance to human or animal health, the
advancement of knowledge, or the good of society.
- The animals selected for a procedure should be of an
appropriate species and quality and the minimum number required to obtain
valid results. Methods such as mathematical models, computer simulation,
and in vitro biological systems should be considered.
- Proper use of animals, including the avoidance or minimization
of discomfort, distress, and pain when consistent with sound scientific
practices, is imperative. Unless the contrary is established, investigators
should consider that procedures that cause pain or distress in human beings
may cause pain or distress in other animals.
- Procedures with animals that may cause more than momentary
or slight pain or distress should be performed with appropriate sedation,
analgesia, or anesthesia. Surgical or other painful procedures should not
be performed on unanesthetized animals.
- Animals that would otherwise suffer severe or chronic
pain or distress that cannot be relieved should be painlessly killed at
the end of the procedure, or, if appropriate, during the procedure.
- The living conditions of animals should be appropriate
for their species and contribute to their health and comfort. Normally
the housing, feeding, and care of all animals used for biomedical purposes
must be directed by a veterinarian or other scientist trained and experienced
in the proper care, handling, and use of the species being maintained or
studied. In any case, veterinary care shall be provided as indicated.
- Investigators and other personnel shall be appropriately
qualified and experienced for conducting procedures on living animals.
Adequate arrangements shall be made for their inservice training, including
the proper and humane care and use of laboratory animals.
- Where exceptions are required in relation to the provisions
of these Principles, the decisions should not rest with the investigators
directly concerned, but should be made with due regard to Principle II
by an appropriate review group, such as the institutional animal research
committee. Such exceptions should not be made solely for the purposes of
teaching or demonstration.
The privilege of using animals for research, teaching,
and testing is accompanied by both ethical and legal responsibilities to
use them appropriately, both scientifically and humanely. Individual faculty
members who use animals in their research or teaching (including those
whose research consists of field work involving animals) are, by law, accountable
for conforming to the basic regulations and policies governing animal use
on this campus. These regulations and policies cover:
- the acquisition, care, and use of animals;
- efforts to minimize animal pain and distress;
- the training of personnel using animals;
- consideration of alternatives to animal use; and
- methods whereby deficiencies in animal care and treatment
are reported
For your own protection, and for the protection of this
institution, faculty who use animals must know, understand, and comply
with applicable laws, regulations, and policies. Furthermore, you are responsible
for properly instructing your students and employees. The laws governing
the use of animals, like those governing other regulated activities, are
framed to ensure compliance via both civil and criminal laws. Failure to
comply can carry penalties that range from substantial fines to "cease
and desist" orders that can suspend all animal research, and all funding
for animal research, at the offending institution. These regulations are
typically applied against an entire institution, thus the innocent are
punished as well as the guilty. These regulations are not subject to negotiation
or individual interpretation by investigators. Both the professional reputation
and the financial well-being of institutions which have failed to comply
have suffered. For these reasons, the prudent investigator will be attentive
to complying with these regulations and will encourage colleagues to do
the same. As a matter of educational policy, faculty who do not themselves
use animals should be aware of these regulations and policies, since their
students may use animals at a later time. Likewise, instruction of students
in proper animal use is an essential component of graduate-level science
education.










Last updated June, 1997