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Dr. Oz's Scientific Experiments Killed Over 300 Dogs, Entire Litter of Puppies

  
Via:  Devangelical  •  2 years ago  •  14 comments

By:   Mehmet Oz (Jezebel)

Dr. Oz's Scientific Experiments Killed Over 300 Dogs, Entire Litter of Puppies
Columbia's internal investigation found that Oz's research team inflicted extensive suffering on canine test subjects in violation of the Animal Welfare Act.

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I guess this was before he decided to become a quack doctor on TV...


S E E D E D   C O N T E N T



In a scandal that will surely make Mitt Romney—who famously strapped his family dog atop the roof of his car for a road trip—look like a PETA activist, a review of 75 studies published by Mehmet Oz between 1989 and 2010 reveals the Republican Senate candidate's research killed over 300 dogs and inflicted significant suffering on them and the other animals used in experiments.

Oz, the New Jersey resident who's currently running for U.S. Senate from Pennsylvania, was a "principal investigator" at the Columbia University Institute of Comparative Medicine labs for years and assumed "full scientific, administrative, and fiscal responsibility for the conduct" of his studies. Over the course of 75 studies published in academic journals reviewed by Jezebel, Oz's team conducted experiments on at least 1,027 live animal subjects that included dogs, pigs, calves, rabbits, and small rodents. Thirty-four of these experiments resulted in the deaths of at least 329 dogs, while two of his experiments killed 31 pigs, and 38 experiments killed 661 rabbits and rodents.

In the early 2000s, testimony from a whistleblower and veterinarian named Catherine Dell'Orto about Oz's research detailed extensive suffering inflicted on his team's canine test subjects, including multiple violations of the Animal Welfare Act, which sets minimum standards of care for dogs, cats, primates, rabbits, and other animals in the possession of animal dealers and laboratories. The law specifically requires researchers and breeders to use pain-relieving drugs or euthanasia on the animals, and not use paralytics without anesthesia, or experiment multiple times on the same animal.

Dell'Orto testified that a dog experimented on by Oz's team experienced lethargy, vomiting, paralysis, and kidney failure, but wasn't euthanized for a full two days. She alleged other truly horrifying examples of gratuitously cruel treatment of dogs, including at least one dog who was kept alive for a month for continued experimentation despite her unstable, painful condition, despite how data from her continued experimentation was deemed unusable. According to Dell'Orto, one Oz-led study resulted in a litter of puppies being killed by intracardiac injection with syringes of expired drugs inserted in their hearts without any sedation. Upon being killed, the puppies were allegedly left in a garbage bag with living puppies who were their littermates. Dell'Orto's allegations, made in 2003 and 2004, are detailed in letters from PETA to the university and USDA. In an interview with Billy Penn last month, she acknowledged PETA "is not a reliable source of information," but said the organization's letters honestly reflected what she told the organization and provided documentation for.

In May 2004, Columbia University was ordered by the USDA to pay a $2,000 penalty for violations of the Animal Welfare Act. The fine paid by Columbia was the result of a settlement between the university and the USDA, based on the findings of Columbia's internal investigation of Oz's research. The USDA accepted these findings, but according to Dell'Orto, the review was faulty, and "had investigators on the committee that were also complicit in this type of poorly designed, cruel animal experimentation." Dell'Orto also noted that while Oz wasn't the one who euthanized the dogs and puppies himself, "When your name is on the experiment, and the way the experiment is designed inflicts such cruelty to these animals, by design, there's a problem."

Months after paying the $2,000 fine, in December 2004, Columbia defended Oz amid the animal abuse allegations, calling him "a highly respected researcher and clinician" who adhered "to the highest standards of animal care," but neglected to deny any of the specific allegations Dell'Orto had made against Oz. On Monday, Jezebel reached out to Columbia's office of communications and public affairs as well as Oz's Senate campaign. Columbia declined to comment, and Oz's campaign has yet to respond. Notably, in April this year, the Daily Beast reported that the university had seemingly cut all ties with Oz, stripping his personal pages from the medical center's website. Oz formerly held senior positions including vice chair of surgery and director of integrated medicine at the medical center.

Oz is currently running against Pennsylvania's Democratic lieutenant governor John Fetterman. Owing to a number of bizarre gaffes on the campaign trail, including a comically out-of-touch campaign video of Oz calling vegetables "crudites" and the resurfacing of his history of creepy comments toward women, Oz has been trailing Fetterman for much of the race. But after a slew of obsessive, anti-Fetterman Fox News segments, and key police endorsements of Oz, the latest polling shows the race tightening.

In an interview with Jezebel last month, Fetterman's wife, Gisele Barreto Fetterman, referenced long-running animal abuse allegations against Oz in a warning to voters. "I think if you look at a profile of someone who makes misogynistic comments, who abuses animals, who does all these things, you're getting a picture of someone who's a pretty dangerous person," Gisele said. "That's certainly not someone I would want making decisions on my rights or any other women's and folks' rights in the state, deciding whether doctors go to jail for performing life-saving services."

Dog abuse allegations against Oz are a drop in the candidate's proverbial bucket of scandals at this point—but given the all-American tradition of loving dogs more than humans, it might be hard to brush this one under the rug.


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devangelical
Professor Principal
1  seeder  devangelical    2 years ago

Trolling, taunting, spamming, and off topic comments may be removed at the discretion of group mods. NT members that vote up their own comments, repeat comments, or continue to disrupt the conversation risk having all of their comments deleted. Please remember to quote the person(s) to whom you are replying to preserve continuity of this seed. Any use of the phrase "Trump Derangement Syndrome" or the TDS acronym in a comment will be deleted.

 
 
 
Gazoo
Junior Silent
1.1  Gazoo  replied to  devangelical @1    2 years ago

[deleted]

 
 
 
Kavika
Professor Principal
2  Kavika     2 years ago

I have a couple of pitties that would love to meet Oz sometime.

 
 
 
MrFrost
Professor Guide
3  MrFrost    2 years ago

Oz is a monster. 

 
 
 
JohnRussell
Professor Principal
4  JohnRussell    2 years ago

I dont think the good people of Pennsylvania will elect a dog murderer. 

 
 
 
Ronin2
Professor Quiet
4.1  Ronin2  replied to  JohnRussell @4    2 years ago

[deleted]

 
 
 
George
Junior Expert
4.1.1  George  replied to  Ronin2 @4.1    2 years ago

[deleted]

 
 
 
Snuffy
Professor Participates
5  Snuffy    2 years ago

I hate that these types of allegations come out this late in the election cycle.  These stories with horrendous points all seem to go the same way, this was horrible treatment but we have no proof that the accused actually did the deed.  

Dell'Orto — who says she quickly raised her concerns with a senior veterinarian — did not see Oz in the labs performing any of the dog experiments, which she says were directly conducted instead by Ph.D. students and post-doctoral fellows.

When PEOPLE reached out to Oz's Senate campaign team for comment, spokesperson Brittany Yannick said in an email: "Dr. Oz was not personally involved in these incidents and to say otherwise is a lie. His name was on some forms due to his role within the Department of Surgery."

Dell'Orto says she has no personal knowledge to support   online claims   that research puppies cried out in pain as they were killed with no anesthesia. She says another lab worker, a veterinary technician whom she identified by name, claimed to have witnessed this, though PEOPLE has been unable to get in contact with the person alleged to be behind these claims.

It is that veterinary technician's account, says Dell'Orto, which PETA relied upon in   a letter the group allegedly wrote to the USDA in 2003 . That letter recounted a complaint, from an unidentified whistle blower, that "a litter of fully conscious puppies" was placed in a plastic bag and killed with expired euthanasia medication injected directly into their hearts, and that the puppies "cried out as they received the IC injection" because it was done without any prior pain killer.

But Oz himself is not mentioned in this letter, nor is he mentioned in the USDA's $2,000 settlement agreement with Columbia in 2004 — a settlement which explicitly states that Columbia neither admits nor denies the USDA's allegation.

Why wasn't this brought out in the primaries to prevent Oz from even becoming the candidate?  There does appear to be some evidence that shows the horrific treatment of animals, but nothing that ties it to Dr Oz except for the fact that he was a cardiothoracic surgeon and Columbia University professor of surgery, as well as director of the Cardiovascular Institute at NewYork-Presbyterian/Columbia University Irving Medical Center.  Should he have been aware of the mistreatment of animals?  Yes, one can easily say that he should have.  But I don't see enough proof to conclusively tie him to this other than his title at the university.  

Afraid this reads like a late term partisan attack.  Don't know how much of an impact it will really have on the November election compared to Fetterman's voting to release violent criminals/murderers.

 
 
 
Drinker of the Wry
Senior Expert
5.1  Drinker of the Wry  replied to  Snuffy @5    2 years ago
I hate that these types of allegations come out this late in the election cycle.  These stories with horrendous points all seem to go the same way, this was horrible treatment but we have no proof that the accused actually did the deed. 

Hence the term, October Surprise.

 
 
 
Greg Jones
Professor Participates
5.2  Greg Jones  replied to  Snuffy @5    2 years ago
"When PEOPLE reached out to Oz's Senate campaign team for comment, spokesperson Brittany Yannick said in an email: "Dr. Oz was not personally involved in these incidents and to say otherwise is a lie. His name was on some forms due to his role within the Department of Surgery."
Just another baseless liberal smear campaign, without a smidgen of proof

 
 
 
George
Junior Expert
5.3  George  replied to  Snuffy @5    2 years ago

[deleted]

 
 
 
Sean Treacy
Professor Principal
6  Sean Treacy    2 years ago

The war on science continues. 

 
 
 
George
Junior Expert
7  George    2 years ago

[deleted]

 
 
 
George
Junior Expert
8  George    2 years ago

[deleted]

 
 

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