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    The Case of Animal Testing Farah Oueidat 1

    INFORMATION ABOUT ANIMAL TESTING

    I. Background on the Paper:While medical science is meant to help improve human life by curing

    disease and preventing deaths, it is sometimes researched on the expense

    of the lives of other creatures: the animals. Indeed, animal rights are being

    constantly violated through experimentations and tests which are done in

    laboratories and sometimes legalized for the aim of producing medical or

    toxic products. However, evidence has shown that such experimentations

    can often be misleading, resulting in dangerous health effects on both

    animals and humans and for a long time. In this paper, I will presenting the

    case of this problem in detail in the first part, then I will talk about my

    reaction on why I believe animal testing should be banned, in addition to

    presenting some of the valid alternatives which can be used instead of the

    abusive experimentations.

    II. Introduction:Animal rights are meant to protect animals from being exploited, mistreated

    or hurt for profit and personal interests by human beings. Although these

    rights are present and supported in many countries around the world, they

    remain to be violated by several institutions and communities that refuse to

    abide by them by conducting animal experimentation. Known as animal

    research, experimentation and in vivo testing, animal testing is the use of

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    The Case of Animal Testing Farah Oueidat 2

    animals for experiments for the purpose of testing drugs, cosmetic products

    and others. Around the world, there are from 50 to 100 million animals used

    every year for that purpose. Examples are frogs, birds, rats, mice and

    others. In the U.S, for example, there are around 80 million mice in 2001

    alone. Most of the animals which are used are euthanized after the

    experiment. Where do researchers get these animals? Some of these

    animals are raised and prepared in the lab itself for the purpose of the

    experiment, while others are caught in the wild or received from dealers.

    III. Animal testing in history:It should be noted that animal testing has been found throughout history.

    The earliest experiments on animals are found in the records of the ancient

    Greeks in the fourth and second centuries BC. Artistotle, for example, was

    among the first individuals in history to do animal testing. Also, a physician

    in Rome during the second century, called Galen,used to dissect goats and

    pigs and has been known as "father of vivisection." Even in the arab world,

    an Arabic physician called Avenzoar during the 12th century in Spain used to

    practice dissection and introduced animal testing as an important method for

    surgical procedures before they are applied on human beings

    IV. Places for Animal TestingResearch and experiments for animal testing are done in places like medical

    schools, university laboratories, defense establishments, farms and

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    The Case of Animal Testing Farah Oueidat 4

    2004) According to the BBC website (2004), animal testing is usually used to

    develop products such as: Household products, Agricultural chemicals,

    Industrial chemicals, Pesticides, Paint, Food additives and others (BBC,

    2004). This is a dangerous and unethical process which should be banned in

    all circumstances, regardless of the kind of product being researched.

    Dangerous evidence that shows how animal testing can actually be

    negative and deadly comes from the 1960s and 1970s. It what was known

    as the Thalidomide Tragedy of the 60s and 70s, a drug called Thalidomide

    was produced by Germany after being testing on thousands of animals and

    was considered safe (Bantwal, 2008). This drug was meant to support

    breastfeeding mothers without harming them or their child. However, what

    happened is that thousands of children who were born from mothers who

    used this drug were actually born with deformities (Bantwal, 2008). An

    additional example from actual implementation of such drugs comes from

    Japan in the 1970s. At that time, a drug called Clioquinol was developed and

    considered a very effective drug because it was also tested on thousands of

    animals (Bantwal, 2008). Although the drug was supposed to cure diarrhea

    in human beings, it proved to do the opposite: It failed to bring relief from

    diarrhea and even provoked it in humans who did not have it (Bantwal,

    2008). As a result of this misleading and unsafe drug, many cases of

    paralysis, deaths and blindness occurred in the public. (Bantwal, 2008)

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    Types of animals used in tests

    This is a cage in which differet animals are put for animal testing

    Some alternative methods:

    There are some who consider alternatives methods for animal testing.

    Governments and scientists recommend that animal testing should be

    limited because of its cruelty and because it brings suffering to animals. An

    important step according to some researchers is having guiding principles to

    accompany the research in most countries:

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    y The first principle is REPLACEMENT: It involves the use of non-animalmethods instead of animal methods whenever possible to reach the

    same scientific result.

    y The second principle is REDUCTION: Which allow the researchers tohave comparable levels of information from a more limited number of

    animals, or receive the same information from the same animals.

    y A third principle is REFINEMENT, which refers to minimize the pain,distress or suffering which animals may go through during the

    experiment, therefore improving their welfare.