PERHAPS A GIFT VOUCHER FOR MUM?: MOTHER'S DAY

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English
World Scientific Publishing Co Pte Ltd
23 October 2008
Laboratory animal research remains a very important part of basic research and drug development. With the worldwide increase in biotechnology, more and more researchers are required to use animals for research. However, many have basic or little training in experimental techniques or in the background information, which remains very important. This book rectifies the problem by providing animal researchers and technicians with the essentials for conducting their work in the laboratory, offering detailed protocols and information that can be referred to on a daily basis. Broadly covering a number of important topics, it draws attention to many of the techniques required to conduct animal research well and responsibly in order to obtain better experimental results.

By:  
Imprint:   World Scientific Publishing Co Pte Ltd
Country of Publication:   Singapore
Volume:   5
Dimensions:   Height: 213mm,  Width: 137mm,  Spine: 23mm
Weight:   431g
ISBN:   9789812779588
ISBN 10:   9812779582
Series:   Manuals In Biomedical Research
Pages:   368
Publication Date:  
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  College/higher education ,  Undergraduate ,  Further / Higher Education
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Animal Handling; Blood Collection: Mice, Rats, Guinea Pigs, Rabbits, Dogs, Nonhuman Primates (Macaque), Miniature Swine; Occupational Health and Safety (OSHE); Animal Husbandry; Animal Identification; Diseases of Laboratory Animals; Caging Systems; Anesthesia and Analgesia; Preoperative and Postoperative Care; Basic Surgery; Pain Management; Euthanasia; Animal Ethics, Laws and Guidelines; Accreditation of Research Animal Facilities; The 3 R's -- Replace, Reduce, Refine; The Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee (IACUC); Project License Application Tips -- How to Write an IACUC Application; Suggested Reading; References; Useful Figures; Forms in Regular Use; Abbreviations; Index.

Reviews for Manual For Laboratory Animal Management, A

The vitality of London in the swinging '60s-and the pathetic, sordid underbelly of it-ably conveyed by Levy (King of Comedy, not reviewed, etc.). Three forces were at work in turning staid England on its head, writes Levy: Bohemians in Chelsea and Soho; radical leftists from the universities and in the media; teens with spending money (this last very important, for the upsurge in the British economy was the quiet partner to this romance). Londoners had a war-and-recovery toughness, but they were also people who'd absorbed the sensibilities and attitudes of the French and the Italians and grafted them onto the materiality and energy of the Americans. This was no dropout crowd, however, as Levy notes, but a New Aristocracy, a celebrity culture that was hardly inclusive. It was fashioned by individuals like the photographer David Bailey and model Jean Shrimpton, Vidal Sassoon and Mary Quant with their playful, puckish, geometric designs in hair and clothes, Terence Stamp, and, certainly, the music, to be understood as the Beatles and the Stones. It was excitable and overheated and dismissable and convincing, all these bells and alarms in music, art, fashion, sex, hair; it celebrated the ephemeral and was fascinated by, in Francis Wyndham's words, tinsel-a bright, brittle quality, the more appealing because it tarnishes so soon. In other words, it ate its children, but not before sealing its own fate with a taste for drugs, bogus mysticism, and a bad case of blinkered attitude. Economic and cultural malaise were in wait- race trouble, austerity, Thatcher, and the gob in the eye of punk rock as the requisite retort. Goodbye, sunshine. Levy's wasn't-it-a-groove closing chapter gets at only half the story that he has otherwise documented so well, of a scene essentially imploding-and taking a lot of lives along the way-from the start. (Kirkus Reviews)


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