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Chimpanzee Management ProgramThe NIH Chimpanzee Management Program (ChiMP) supports long-term, cost-effective housing and maintenance at NCRR-supported facilities for chimpanzees. NCRR provides programmatic oversight of the facilities and ensures they comply with the Animal Welfare Act, and policies concerning laboratory animal care and use. In 1995, a breeding moratorium on NCRR-owned and supported chimpanzees was instituted. Soon after, the Chimpanzee Management Plan Working Group was created to periodically assess the need for chimpanzees in research and to report its findings to the National Advisory Research Resources Council, NCRR's advisory body. The Working Group serves as a fact-finding body that gathers information, analyzes relevant issues and facts, and drafts proposed position papers. The Working Group is comprised of non-government members with a wide range of scientific and non-scientific expertise. The most recent meeting of the Working Group was held in March 2007 and the Report of the Chimpanzee Management Plan Working Group (view printer-friendly PDF version, requires free Acrobat Reader) was provided to the Council on May 22, 2007. While NCRR acknowledges the continuing importance of chimpanzees to biomedical research, it also recognizes the fiduciary responsibilities it has to maintain the health and well-being of the chimpanzees already in its care. Since chimpanzees in captivity can live 50 years or more, high-quality care for just one animal over its lifespan can cost $300,000 to $500,000. In addition to its responsibilities to provide care for the existing chimpanzees owned or supported by NCRR, the Center must also fulfill its budget responsibilities to its other programs and resources, which are critical to the creation and delivery of lifesaving cures and treatments to the American people. Therefore, after careful review of existing chimpanzee resources, NCRR has determined that it does not have the financial resources to support the breeding of chimpanzees that are owned or supported by NCRR. However, NCRR will continue to honor its commitments to the existing chimpanzee facilities, including the federal sanctuary for chimpanzees that are no longer needed in biomedical research. Chimpanzee SanctuaryIn September 2002, NCRR announced the award of a contract to Chimp Haven, Inc., a private, nonprofit organization, to establish and operate a chimpanzee sanctuary. The sanctuary will provide lifetime care for federally owned or supported chimpanzees that are no longer needed for biomedical research. Over the term of the 10-year, cost-sharing contract, NCRR will provide approximately $19 million in total costs, and Chimp Haven will contribute approximately $4 million toward direct costs. NCRR also awarded two construction grants, totaling a little over $11.5 million, so that Chimp Haven could develop and build the state-of-the-art facility. A sanctuary system to provide lifetime care of retired research chimpanzees was mandated by the Chimpanzees Health Improvement, Maintenance, and Protection (CHIMP) Act of December 2000. In addition, NCRR proposes to issue standards to implement provisions of the CHIMP Act, which authorized the Secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS) to develop and publish standards of care for chimpanzees held in the sanctuary system. These proposed standards will apply to only those facilities receiving Federal funds as a part of the federally funded chimpanzee sanctuary system. January 11, 2005, Federal Register Notice: Proposed Standards of Care for Chimpanzees Held in the Federally Supported Chimpanzee System (view printer-friendly PDF version, requires free Acrobat Reader)). For further information, contact: Harold L. Watson, Ph.D. |
National Institutes of Health (NIH) Bethesda, Maryland 20892 |
Department of Health and Human Services |