Case 11 Facts About Animal Testing

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Every day, there are thousands of animals being tested on all over the world for the benefit of human beings. In response, due to moral objections, organizations like PETA (People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals), and the HSUS (The Humane Society of the United States) have formed to protest against the use of animals and to find alternatives to testing on these creatures. Yet, the use of animals in the lab has led to many medical breakthroughs like the artificial heart and the smallpox vaccine, which have improved and/or lengthened the lives of individuals everywhere. Accordingly, a debate has arisen about the need for animal testing and whether it has a place in today’s world.
Those who support animal testing claim that a multitude of …show more content…

In “11 Facts About Animal Testing,” the author compiles various facts he/she found during his/her research on animal testing: “92% of experimental drugs that are safe and effective in animals fail in human clinical trials because they are too dangerous or don’t work.” Humans react much differently to the products that pass during animal trials due to the anatomical variations between the species. The results the scientists reach most of the time do not even work. The testing that is done is essentially useless and a waste of time. Likewise, author Rhiannon also says that the testing does not achieve the goal in many instances, she concludes: “This is confirmed by scientific reviews that show correlations between the results of animal experimentation and human outcomes are negligible, expensive and unnecessary. Most animal experiments do not translate to clinical trials, are not validated, minimally cited, and use methodologies that render findings as unreliable.” The second major factor is the cost of testing on animals. It is expensive for the company and it rarely works. Better options are available compared to the companies wasting money on animal testing when there being a high chance the product will fail in the human testing trials …show more content…

A writer for the Humane Society International elaborates on the situation of the role animal testing has today: “So if we want better quality medical research, safer more effective pharmaceuticals and cures to human diseases, we need to turn the page in the history books and embrace the new chapter—21st century science” (“About Animal Testing”). The author is explaining to the reader that with the technology available today the use of animal testing is outdated. So, the people who are against what is being done to these creatures can go to sleep without a worry and the companies who follow a different path. Besides, animal testing can still have the advances they are striving for while saving money. The testing done on animals is expensive and the alternative of using computer generated trials will save the companies a great deal of money

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