Home Office
Household products testing ban
The
describes the implementation of a policy ban on the testing of finished household products and the requirements in relation to the testing of ingredients for household products on live animals under the terms of ASPA. The policy concerns tests on animals for the assessment of the safety of household products for humans, animals and the environment.Guidance on the use of human material in animals
The Academy of Medical Sciences (AMS) published a report in 2011 that considered research involving the introduction of human DNA sequences into animals, or the mixing of human and animal cells or tissues. Such procedures create entities which are termed animals containing human material (ACHM). Within this report the AMS recommended that the Home Office develop guidance on the use of human material in animals that details the authorities required when considering work with ACHM.
This guidance brings together information on the various regulations and guidance surrounding the use of animals containing human materials and the relevant authorities. It has been created in collaboration with the Human Tissue Authority, the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority and the Academy of Medical Sciences.
Use, keeping alive and re-use
The
explains the interpretations of the terms use, re-use and continued use under ASPA. It also provides advice on the criteria that must be satisfied to keep animals alive at the end of a series of regulated procedures.Harm-benefit analysis
operational guidance. This advice note describes how the harm-benefit analysis is conducted operationally.
conducted by Home Office inspectors, is the cornerstone of the licensing system for the use of animals in science and judges whether the likely harms to animals can be justified by the likely benefits. The Home Office has already published a paper on the purpose of the harm - benefit analysis as an appendix of theRe-homing and setting free
The purpose of this
is to provide information on the legal requirements and guidance on current best practice in re-homing and setting free. The Home Office expects that every opportunity will be taken to re-home animals where it is appropriate to do so. This advice note explains the criteria required for the Secretary of State to consent for the re-homing or setting free at the end of procedures of relevant protected animals that have been bred, supplied, kept or used in regulated procedures.Working with animals taken from the wild
The
advice note provides information about how the ASPA requirements affect scientific or educational work using animals taken from the wild, including feral and stray animals. This includes information about:- methods of capture
- identification (ringing, tagging or marking animals)
- working with animals at places which are not ASPA licensed establishments
- setting animals free in the course of regulated procedures which have not yet ended
- legal and licensing requirements
Code of practice for the care and accommodation of animals
The code of practice sets out the standards of care and accommodation of animals required by ASPA, and provides advice about the way in which those responsible under ASPA may comply with those requirements.
The intention of the code is to ensure that the design, construction and function of the installations and equipment of licensed establishments along with their staffing, care and practices provides for scientific procedures to be carried out as effectively as possible.
The code is in 3 sections covering both general and species specific indications:
- section 1 describes the legal minimum standards applicable until 31 December 2016
- section 2 describes the legal minimum standards applicable from 1 January 2017
- section 3 provides non-mandatory advice to assist licensees to comply with the standards and covers a broader range of subjects than sections 1 and 2 alone
The full version and the short guide to the code are available to download. Personal copies of the code of practice can be purchased from TSO bookshop TSO bookshop using the ISBN 9780108561290.
The code of practice is also available to download split by species:
- rodents and rabbits
- dogs, cats and ferrets
- non-human primates, farm animals and birds
- fish, amphibians, reptiles and cephalopods
You can read the
or .E?cient breeding of genetically altered animals
This advice note on