Merrit Clifton,
Animals 24-7
December 2015
[Also read: NIH Ending Baby Monkey Torture!]
Two monkey mothers with babies in the Suomi lab. (From NIH video
obtained by PETA via the Freedom of Information Act.)
Funding ended for experiments by Harlow aide Stephen J. Suomi
Two monkey mothers with babies in the Suomi lab. (From NIH video obtained by
PETA via the Freedom of Information Act.)
POOLESVILLE, Maryland––The National Institutes of Health have pulled the plug on another of the last active legacies of the infamous vivisector Harry Harlow, halting funding for psychological experiments on baby monkeys conducted since circa 1983 by Stephen J. Suomi at the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development in Bethesda, Maryland.
Followed Wisconsin experimental re-design
The Suomi experiments were defunded three months after the NIH confirmed
that maternal deprivation experiments with baby monkeys would not proceed at
the University of Wisconsin, where Harlow conducted comparable experiments
from 1930 to 1970.
The University of Wisconsin itself had announced in March 2015, after a
multi-year campaign led by former Alliance for Animals executive director
Rick Bogle, that the planned experiments, to have been done by senior
faculty member Ned Kalin, had been redesigned to eliminate the maternal
deprivation component.
$10 million in funding
Suomi’s experiments at the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of
Child Health and Human Development had reportedly received more than $10
million in NIH funding since 2008. But National Institute of Child Health
and Human Development scientific director Constantine Stratakis told
BuzzFeed reported Azeen Ghorayshi that the Suomi experiments were ended
because of the “increasing costs of facilities.”
“This decision was based on internal programmatic priorities and the desire
to optimize research efficiency,” an unnamed NICHHD spokesperson earlier
told Amy Kraft of CBS News.
Researcher to retire
Suomi, 70, chief of the NICHHD Laboratory of Comparative Ethology is to
retire from active involvement in animal research.
“Suomi will continue his research analyzing behavioral data and conducting
experiments on previously stored tissue samples, but will no longer work
with live monkeys,” wrote Ghorayshi.
Suomi, 70, earned his Ph.D. from the University of Wisconsin at Madison
after three years as a research assistant to Harlow.
Dismantled Harlow lab
When Harlow semi-retired to spend the last 10 years of his life at a
part-time post at the University of Arizona, Suomi and fellow graduate
student researcher Gene Sackett dismantled the lab where they had helped
Harlow.
Sackett later attributed the rise of the animal rights movement several
years later to public outrage over Harlow’s experiments.
PETA campaign
The National Institute of Child Health and Human Development did not
acknowledge the influence of PETA in terminating Suomi’s funding. Summarized
Ghorayshi, “PETA last fall obtained access to over 550 hours of video
footage and 100 photos through Freedom of Information Act requests. The
records included some images of baby monkeys in intense states of distress.
In response to a congressional request, the National Institutes of Health
conducted a bioethical review of the experiments.”
Told to stop invasive procedures
National Institutes of Health director Francis Collins in February 2015
asked Suomi to stop all use of invasive procedures, including spinal taps,
blood draws, and neonatal brain recordings.
“Over the next three years,” Ghorayshi said, “approximately 100 animals per
year will be transferred from Suomi’s lab to other facilities across the
country.”
Word that Suomi’s monkey experiments had been defunded came first from U.S.
Congressional Representive Brendan Boyle (D-Philadelphia), who with
Representative Lucille Roybal-Allard (D-Los Angeles) had led Congressional
opposition to the research.
“Many constituents wrote me about NIH’s tests on baby monkeys, and I’m glad
I was able to help end them,” Boyle tweeted.
Harry Harlow
Summarized a PETA web page criticizing the Suomi studies, “Harry Harlow’s psychological experiments on monkeys were infamous for their cruelty. Harlow tore newborns away from their mothers, gave some infants “surrogate mothers” made of wire and wood, and kept other traumatized babies in isolation in tiny metal boxes, sometimes for up to a year. Realizing that such horrific conditions resulted in long-term, debilitating psychological trauma for the infants, Harlow began expanding his project. He and his then-student Suomi created the ‘pit of despair,’ a dark metal box designed to isolate the monkeys from everything in the outside world.
Within days, the monkeys kept inside the pit were driven insane, incessantly rocking and clutching at themselves, tearing and biting their own skin and ripping out their hair. When finally removed from isolation, they were too traumatized to interact with other monkeys, and some were so shocked and depressed that they starved themselves to death. To see what would happen when tormented monkeys became mothers themselves, Suomi and Harlow created what they called a ‘rape rack’ in order to restrain and impregnate female monkeys, then they would later watch and photograph the mentally ill mothers physically abusing and killing their own babies.”
Nightmares
Suomi admitted to Deborah Blum, author of the Pulitzer Prize-winning book
The Monkey Wars (1992) and Love at Goon Park: Harry Harlow and the Science
of Affection (2002) that the experiments gave him nightmares.
But that didn’t stop Suomi from spending most of his own career doing
similar work, albeit with much less flamboyance than Harlow.
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