Membro della SCNAT

La SGV promuove la scienza degli animali da laboratorio, la protezione degli animali e le considerazioni etiche nella sperimentazione animale. Questi obiettivi saranno raggiunti per mezzo dell’organizzazione dell’istruzione e del flusso d’informazioni all’interno della comunità scientifica.di più

Immagine: LoveIsAFastSong, photocase.dedi più

SGV Awards


Maike Heimann
Immagine: SGV

SGV Award 2022

Communication
Dr Maike Heimann

Public interest in animal experimentation–how to make them care?


Hanno Würbel
Immagine: SGV

SGV Award 2019

Reduction
Prof. Hanno Würbel

University of Bern, Switzerland
Embracing variability to improve reproducibility and minimize animal use

Jane Hurst
Immagine: SGV

Refinement
Prof. Jane Hurst

University of Liverpool, United Kingdom
Tunneling - non-aversive handling of mice

Patrycja Nowak-Sliwinska
Immagine: SGV

Replacement
Prof. Patrycja Nowak-Sliwinska

University of Geneva, Switzerland
Alternatives to Mammalian Screening Models


SGV Awardee 2018 V. Baumans

SGV Award 2018

Refinement
Prof. Vera Baumans

Utrecht University, Netherlands
Animal welfare and good science: where are we going?


SGV Award 2017

Refinement
Dr Penny Hawkins

Dr Elliot Lilley
Royal Society for the Prevention of Animal Cruelty RSPCA
Humane endpoints


MacLeod
Immagine: SGV

SGV Award 2016

Reduction
Prof M. MacLeod

University of Edingburgh, United Kingdom
Risk of Bias in Reports of In Vivo Research: A Focus for Improvement


SGV Award 2015

Reduction
Prof Irving Zucker

University of California, Berkeley, USA
Underepresentation of female mice in neuroscience: a meta-analysis


SGV Award 2014

Refinement
Prof Paul Flecknell

Newcastle University, United Kingdom
Analgesic Best Practice for the Use of Animals in Research: a review


Garner
Immagine: SGV

SGV Award 2013

Refinement
Prof Joseph Garner

Department of Comparative Medicine and the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Stanford University, Stanford, California, United States of America

Dr Brianna Gaskill
Department of Animal Science, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana, United States of America, Charles River Laboratories, Wilmington, Massachusetts, United States of America
The impact of nesting enrichment on the thermal behavior, physiology and wellbeing of laboratory mice


Mogil
Immagine: SGV

SGV Award 2012

Refinement
Professor Jeffrey S. Mogil

McGill University, Montreal, Canada
Facial expression of pain in laboratory rodents


Maike Heinmann
Immagine: SGV

SGV Award 2011

Refinement
Dr Maike Heimann

Novartis Pharma AG, Preclinical Safety, Basel, Switzerland
Sublingual and submandibular blood collection in mice: a comparison of effects on body weight, food consumption and tissue damage

Merel Ritskes
Immagine: SGV

Reduction-Refinement
Prof. Merel Ritskes-Hoitinga

Radboud University Medical Center, Nijmegen, Netherlands
A gold standard publication checklist for improved design, reporting and improving scientific quality of animal studies, to fully integrate the Three Rs, and to make systematic reviews more feasible.


SGV Award 2010

Replacement
Pascal Narcisse Martin
Novartis Institute for BioMedical Research, Basel, Switzerland
Silicon Rabbit Ear


SGV Award 2009

Refinement
Anne Julien
Richard Boutet

Centre de Recherche Hôtel-Dieu de Québec, Canada
Micro-tatto Aramis

CONDITION TO BE ELLIGIBLE

Eligible as full members are persons who hold appropriate qualifications in biological, veterinary or medical sciences or who, by their experience and attainments, qualify as respected specialists in the field of laboratory animal science. Eligible as institutional members are persons or organizations intending to support the activities of the society.

The membership fees are currently 50.-CHF per year for an full member and 300.- CHF per year for an institutional member.

Reduce: Prof Hanno Würbel University of Berne Switzerland
Refine: Prof Jane Hurst University of Liverpool England
Replace: Prof Patrycja Novak-Sliwinska University of Geneva Switzerland