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FELASA Module 7 Housing, Management and Occupational Health

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FELASA function ABD course notes for module 7 concerning housing, management and occupational house

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  • May 9, 2024
  • 9
  • 2023/2024
  • Class notes
  • Felasa abd
  • Module 7
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FELASA Module 7: Housing, Management and Occupational Health
 Danish Legislation on facilities, care and husbandry is based on the EU directive 2010/63
 The animal facility can be in a separate building or in a shared building
 Staff include a manager, animal caretakers and a vet
 Support staff like administration can also be included
 Usually has one or more units
 Large facilities may have different units for experiments vs breeding vs large
animals
 Each unit has one or more rooms, different rooms are used for different functions
 Animals are kept in a room with cages, tanks, pens etc.
 Rooms for shared equipment like washing machines are found outside the unit
 Facilities are often in isolated areas
 Facilities in shared buildings are usually discreet due to security and public relations
 Usually a closed area to stop infections in the animals and to stop the spread of
zoonotic infections in the public
 Barrier animal housing
 Keeps microbes away from the animals
 Can be barriers at cage level, room level, area within a facility or the entire facility
 Can included physical barriers like walls or behavioural ones such as disinfection
 Includes things such as autoclaving cages and materials
 Also bedding and food is irradiated
 All surfaces need to be stable within the barrier and not include holes that dirt can
enter into
 Surfaces must be able to withstand cleaning and disinfection
 Conventional animal housing has no standard definition
 It usually means that you can come and go from the area without special precautions
 Usually contains open cages
 Carries risk of moving infection into facility
 Air pressure is important in an animal facility to prevent movement of air into the
facility
 Windows shouldn’t be able to be opened
 Hyper-pressure should be maintained in barrier units
 Hypo-pressure should be maintained in quarantine rooms
 Positive pressure rooms maintain a flow of air out of the room, protecting animals
inside from contaminants
 Negative pressure rooms maintain a flow of air into the room, keeping contaminants
from reaching surrounding areas
 Circulation is the movement of dirty and clean material in a unit
 Cages become dirty when animals have used them
 When cages become dirty, animals are transferred to new cages
 Dirty cages are transported to a cleaning area
 There should be a way of separating clean and dirty cages
 Single corridor units need dirty cages and clean cages to be transported through the
same doors
 This means clean cages can get contaminated when leaving the cage wash area
 This can be overcome by having specific clean/dirty cage times or covering
cages in plastic
 Dual corridor systems have a clean and a dirty corridor system, having clean cages
bought in at one end of the room and dirty cages leaving through another door
 To be really effective different people need to operate the clean/dirty corridors
 Rarely happens
 Entering a barrier facility
 There are different levels of barriers
 Highest level:
 Animals enter only via rederivation

,  Personnel shower and change clothing
 Gloves and masks are sometime used
 Sometimes staff cannot enter if they have visited other animal facilities
 Supplies are autoclaved
 Sterile supplies go through a chemical lock
 At lower levels animals from trusted vendors or any animals can enter
 Containment facility
 Designed to keep contaminated material inside
 Waste including water may be filtered or sterilized
 People entering wear a suit with hypo-pressure and may need to be disinfected when
leaving
 Housing
 There are three legal definitions of housing in the EU directive
 Establishment: any installation, building, group of buildings or premises…where
animals are kept for longer time periods (E.g. Department of experimental medicine)
 Holding room: Rooms, stables or animal rooms where animal enclosures are kept
(E.g. Room 10.3.38)
 Animal enclosure: Any kind of enclosed area such as aquariums, terrariums, cages
or pens which are specially designed for keeping experimental animals (E.g. A
mouse cage in room 10.3.38)
 The aim of housing an husbandry is to meet regulatory demands, to consider the
animals comfort and well-being, and to control the animal’s environment
 Environmental factors include genetic, microbial, chemical and physical
 Danish legislation contains both a general part and an appendix for different species
 It is identical to the recommendations in the EU directive
 Some of the minimum requirements stated include information about environment,
health and caging
 Animal needs include: space to walk, surfaces, places to rest, hide and feel safe,
food and drink, company, temperature, air, circadian cycle, possibility to keep clean
and dry and opportunity for exercise
 These vary depending on species
 Enclosures need to meet the EU directive standards but also need to be practical
and be able to withstand wear and tear, not influence research and be easy to clean
 Husbandry involves caring for the animals and daily work that happens in the facility
 This includes tasks such as: receiving, marking, cage changing, cleaning, feeding,
watering, breeding, weaning, observing and killing
 Acclimatisation: how well an animal adjusts to its environment
 Allows an animal to maintain performance across different environments
 When animals arrive they have been subjected to transportation and are in an
environment different to one they have left
 This can effect different physiological conditions, therefore effecting
experimental results
 A period of acclimatization is a legal requirement- usually 1-2 weeks
 Some functions require longer
 Rats and mice are usually held in plastic cages
 Open cage- has a steel grid over the top of the cage
 Need to be changed 1-2 times per week
 Animals not very protected from pathogens
 Humans will be exposed to lots of allergens in these types of rooms
 Open cages can be put into a container called a scantainer
 HEPA filtered so both animals and people are protected
 Individually ventilated cages (IVC)
 Sometimes called a microisolator
 Airtight animal cage with air supply and exhaust system
 Animal room will have very few allergens and be odor free

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