ブリアナ・エヴィガンのインスタグラム(brianaevigan) - 3月29日 12時49分


(Click link in bio) I heard about this awhile ago, and can’t believe it’s come to this. We are being asked as a human race to stop. We’ve done enough. We have to stop taking! Please read below so you can understand more from someone who’s spent time there. #repost @paulhiltonphoto
Speechless. According to China’s state run Xinhua News Agency, they are recommending bear bile injections as a treatment for CoVid-19 @eia_news
In early 2000 I spent time with @animals.asia.jill of @animalsasia and I have to say this is the cruelest practised I have ever witnessed, bears in crusher cages year after year, draining them of bile. I’m so f.... angry right now. They deserve all they get... Despite a scientific consensus pointing to China’s wildlife trade as the most likely cause of the coronavirus pandemic, the country’s Government is currently touting a treatment containing bile milked from bears held in captivity.

Bile is a digestive fluid produced by the liver and stored in the gallbladder. It is harvested using several techniques, all of which require some degree of invasive surgery.

EIA has learnt that in a published list of recommended treatments for coronavirus (aka COVID-19), the country’s National Health Commission is promoting injections of a traditional medicine treatment which contains bear bile. “Tan Re Qing” injections are among the recommended treatments for ‘severe’ and ‘critical’ cases of coronavirus in the COVID-19 Diagnosis and Treatment Plan (7th Trial Version), published on 4 March 2020 by the National Health Commission and circulated via State media.

Bear bile is one of the ingredients of “Tan Re Qing”, according to the website of a major pharmaceutical manufacturer.
In February, the Chinese Government banned the consumption of most terrestrial wild animals as food in the wake of coronavirus. This should be a positive move if implemented effectively and ethically – however, the ban does not cover use of wildlife products in traditional Chinese medicine or as ornamental items.

Traditional medicines containing threatened wildlife parts such as pangolin scales, leopard bones, saiga horn and the bile of captive-bred bears are still legal in China


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