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On Monday, Jezebel reported the allegation that Oz oversaw medical research in which dogs were abused and killed for studies published between 1989 and 2010. After the Jezebel article was published, Oz’s opponent in the Pennsylvania Senate race — Democrat John Fetterman — tweeted a link to the piece with the comment, “BREAKING: Dr. Oz is a puppy killer.”
But is there evidence to support claims that Oz was, as the Jezebel article states, involved in research that “inflicted significant suffering” on animals used in experiments?
Dell’Orto tells PEOPLE she witnessed the inhumane treatment of dogs in lab experiments investigating aspects of heart function over which Oz served in the role of “principal investigator” — including leaving dogs in pain and paralyzed for weeks, with no discernible research benefit, before they were euthanized or died.
“When someone makes the choice to use an animal in a research experiment they should be 100 percent committed to reducing any suffering that animal will experience,” says Dell’Orto. “And I did not see that happening with Oz. I saw the opposite.”
When PEOPLE reached out to Oz’s Senate campaign team for comment, spokesperson Brittany Yannick said in an email: “Dr. Oz was not personally involved in these incidents and to say otherwise is a lie. His name was on some forms due to his role within the Department of Surgery.”
Columbia’s websitesays that when one is named principal investigator of a research study, he or she “has overall responsibility for safety and compliance in his or her laboratory.”
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Dell’Orto said some principal investigators actually did come into the lab and directly oversee their animals' care, putting themselves in a position to ensure minimal suffering. With Oz, she says, “There were no endpoints. What I saw was abuse.”
It is that veterinary technician’s account, says Dell’Orto, which PETA relied upon ina letter the group allegedly wrote to the USDA in 2003. That letter recounted a complaint, from an unidentified whistle blower, that “a litter of fully conscious puppies” was placed in a plastic bag and killed with expired euthanasia medication injected directly into their hearts, and that the puppies “cried out as they received the IC injection” because it was done without any prior pain killer.
But Oz himself is not mentioned in this letter, nor is he mentioned in the USDA’s $2,000 settlement agreement with Columbia in 2004 — a settlement which explicitly states that Columbia neither admits nor denies the USDA’s allegation.
Columbia University.Daniel Barry/Bloomberg News

“But,” she says, “there are a lot of valid things he did wrong.”
Dell’Orto tells PEOPLE that before she resigned in February of 2003, she saw about 30 dogs upon whom research was performed as part of procedures for which Oz was principal investigator.
She says she saw some of these dogs' chests opened so that pacemakers could be inserted into their hearts, “pacing them at a very high rate to induce heart failure.”
Then, she says, “they were doing different treatments to see what worked.”
“I didn’t think it was good science,” Dell’Orto says. “I didn’t think the results that came from such experiments were worthy of adding to the scientific database. It was so poorly done.”
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She says she also saw some of these dogs left paralyzed for days or weeks, apparently suffering and in pain before death via euthanasia. They’d lose more than 20% of their body weight and were left struggling to breathe, she says, adding that in her opinion, the study “was not designed” to promptly euthanize dogs at the point that the experiments became inhumane.
PEOPLE asked Oz’s campaign team to respond to claims that the experiments for which he was principal investigator were conducted poorly and in many cases inhumane. Yannick, his spokesperson, responded: “While Dr. Oz was busy operating on human lives, researchers and veterinarians were in the Columbia University research labs finding new approaches to treat patients with atrial fibrillation which impacts millions of Americans.”
She continued: “Dr. Oz was not in the operating room when the operations were done, he wasn’t present during the post-op treatments, no one alerted him of the problem until after the cases were finished and he does not condone the mistreatment of animals.”
Back at Columbia, Dell’Orto says she took her concerns — backed up with photocopies she made of three dogs' lab records with Oz as P.I. — to the administrator for the university’s Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee in October of 2002. (She says thedetail of the lab records she provided are nowavailable onlineas part of a PETA site titled “Columbia University Cruelty.") These included dogs in Oz-led research. With one, Dell’Orto says she saw that from two days after painful surgery till the pup was euthanized, the dog, labeled 6269, was vomiting and unable to stand up, with bloody urine. Another dog was kept alive for 29 days post-operatively despite being paralyzed and with no clear research benefit, says Dell’Orto.
“Horrible things that went on,” she says. “I mean, they just were not cared for properly. They were not given proper pain medications.”
Columbia University.Barry Winiker/Getty

Columbia set up a committee to investigate these concerns as well as other concerns she had about stroke research on baboons.
Dell’Orto then contacted the USDA, which oversees compliance with the Animal Welfare Act. And to make sure that the issue stayed at the forefront, she says she also contacted PETA.
By February 2003, Dell’Orto says she quit her job at Columbia. “I was shunned at that point,” she says, “and I thought I could be more productive with a different job.”
She worked for a small animal clinic in Ardsley, New York, and a year later moved to Tucson, Arizona, where she still lives, working with horses.
One dog — whose chest was opened (called a sternotomy) and received radiofrequency ablation on July 17, 2002 — developed paralysis, lethargy, vomiting and renal failure, suffering for a week. But “the records do not show why the animal was kept alive” until euthanized a week later, on July 24.
Another dog, which underwent the same procedure on July 11, 2002, “was in chronic distress (paralyzed in hindquarters)” but kept alive for 29 days until euthanized.
“The records did not contain a rationale for keeping the animal alive in a paralyzed condition for a prolonged period of time,” the investigative committee wrote.
source: people.com