Why Is Animal Testing Wrong

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There are many opinions and people who dissent on whether animal testing should be continued or if it is a crime to the world. It may be one’s consent another to see that it is extremely wrong. Animal testing is an exemplification of how humanity has come to using innocent defenseless animals to satisfy for its own selfish desires. When animal testing became a popular way to test products in the, 1900s it was genuinely believed that animals could not feel pain or emotions and that they were robots. People back then tested on animals for many different reasons such as research, theories, medicines, products and many more although, research on living animals has been practiced since at least 500 BC. Animal testing is wrong because animal tested …show more content…

Some experiments involve killing a pregnant animal and performing tests on their fetuses. Drugs that pass animal tests are not necessarily safe. The 1950s sleeping pill thalidomide, which caused 10,000 babies to be born with severe deformities, was tested on animals prior to its commercial release. Later tests on pregnant mice, rats, guinea pigs, cats, and hamsters did not result in birth defects unless the drug was administered at extremely high doses. Animal tests on the arthritis drug Vioxx showed that it had a protective effect on the hearts of mice, yet the drug went on to cause more than 27,000 heart attacks and sudden cardiac deaths before being pulled from the …show more content…

In ancient times, scientists made use of animals principally to satisfy anatomical curiosity. Early Greek physician-scientists performed experiments on living animals. Herophilus and Erasistratus, for example, examined sensory nerves, motor nerves, and tendons in order to understand their functional differences. But, it is still truly an apprehension that so many animals are killed every year for mankind’s own selfish purposes when we could easily stop the torture and instead use other things. There is probably a myriad of ideas waiting to be tried out. The Draize eye test, used by cosmetics companies to evaluate irritation caused by shampoos and other products, involves rabbits being incapacitated in stocks with their eyelids held open by clips, sometimes for multiple days, so they cannot blink away the products being tested. The commonly used LD50 (lethal dose 50) test involves finding out which dose of a chemical will kill 50% of the animals being used in the experiment. The US Department of Agriculture (USDA) reported in 2010 that 97,123 animals suffered pain during experiments while being given no anesthesia for relief, including 1,395 primates, 5,996 rabbits, 33,652 guinea pigs, and 48,015 hamsters

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