Have you ever taken an antibiotic when you had a cold? Have you ever gotten a vaccine for the flu? If your answer is yes, then you can thank animal research because “Without animal research, medicine as we know it today wouldn’t exist” says Kristen Cook from pro-test.org. So, although animal experimentation can be labeled animal cruelty, sometimes using animals to experiment on is the only option for research. Animal experimentation research has brought many lifesaving medical benefits to the world. The California Biomedical Research Association states that nearly every medical breakthrough in the last 100 years has resulted directly from research using animals. According to foundation for biomedical reseach, If you’ve ever taken antibiotics, had a vaccine, a blood transfusion, dialysis, an organ transplant, chemotherapy, bypass surgery or joint replacement, you have benefitted from animal testing and research. In fact, practically every drug, treatment, medical device, diagnostic tool or cure we have today was developed with the help of lab animals. One of the lifesaving medicines is penicillin. It was discovered in 1928, when Alexander Fleming noticed that staphylococcus bacilli would not grow on a culture medium accidentally contaminated with a mold, Penicillin notatum. But, test tube experiments failed to show the antibiotic properties he expected. Ten years later, Oxford chemists Ernest Chain and Howard Florey were working on antibacterial substances. Penicillin
Worldwide, there has always been a plethora of issues concerning whether animals should or should not be used for biomedical research. There are some advocating for the best and most-advanced medicine for the people; with disregard for the animal’s health. They believe people’s needs should be the first concern. However, others put the animal’s health first. If the animal is not in safe conditions, then it does not matter what medicine advances might be discovered. Biomedical research is defined as “The application of the natural sciences, especially the biological and physiological sciences, to clinical medicine” (“Biomedicine.” Dictionary.com, Dictionary.com, www.dictionary.com/browse/biomedical.). Without biomedical research on animals, modern medicine would not exist. Animal testing has enabled the findings of treatments for cancer, antibiotics for infections, and preventatives for illnesses. For these reasons, animal testing should be used in the process of developing biomedical research.
Research groups do not allow abuse of animals in any form and they designate certain people to take care of the animals. All humans benefit from animal research in a certain way. Thanks to animal research, vaccines have been developed for polio, diphtheria, and measles. Chemotherapy treatments and insulin treatments were tested and developed thanks to animal research. With animal research, researchers were able to perform cardiac bypass surgery, perform organ transplants, and place stints through the femoral artery instead of open heart surgery. Under proper conditions, animal research can accomplish many things. Animal research can help humans understand diseases, create vaccines, create antibiotics perform surgeries to extend life, treat cancer, create pharmaceuticals that are safe to be consumed by humans and animals, and create ways to help benefit humans and animals walk easier or comfortably. Thanks to animal research, human medicine has advanced in extraordinary
Everyone has benefited from the use of animal research in one way or another. My sister was diagnosed with asthma when born and without the help of animal research asthma would still be incurable. Experiencing this history with my sister I went into this research with a large bias for animal research. I found that research on animals is not a new discussion, “[h]umans have been using other vertebrate animal species…as models of their anatomy and physiology since the dawn of medicine.” (Franco 239) The ancient Greeks used animals for experiments with no question of morality ever being raised because of their “ranking in the scala naturae (the chain of being).” (Franco) Every major era came with a new dispute over how to handle animal
Animals that are put forward to medical experimentation contribute to cures and treatments that have saved many lives. The California Biomedical Research Association states that “nearly every medical breakthrough in the last 100 years has resulted directly from research using animals.” (California Biomedical Research Association). Animals that are used for these tests have contributed incredible discoveries on unimaginable areas starting on Cancer, HIV/AIDS, Heart Disease/Stroke, Diabetes, Birth Defects, and Spinal Cord Injuries. Animal testing has made medical discoveries to go from antibiotics to blood transfusions, from
We often see animal testing as an inhumane act of cruelty, however, we do not recognize the benefits and reasoning behind it all. After carefully studying the reasoning behind animals in medical research, I was appalled by the numerous beneficial outcomes. Research professionals tells us “Medical testing on animals has provided humans with an understanding of how body reacts to certain medications, diseases, or vaccines (animalresearch.info).” Without conducting such research, humans would have no further advancements in medicine, nor any knowledge of their effects. Have you ever noticed the prominence of commercials advertising a new medication? Whether it was a new birth control, blood thinner, or vaccine, more than likely, an animal was used to test the medicine. Animal Smart researchers explains how “Vaccines such as smallpox, measles, mumps, diphtheria and tetanus would have taken much longer to develop without the use of animal research (animal smart). Such diseases would have taken the lives of many young children and adults if there were no
As you can see with these examples, it is absolutely necessary to use animals in research; for diseases that currently exist and for the ones yet to be discovered. There is no doubt that using animals to test products and to develop lifesaving medications and surgical procedures have improved our quality of life
Thanks to them mankind have been saved. Using animals to test in order to find new cures is called animal testing. These experiments or tests use mice, monkeys or other animals. Animal testing is a great thing not only because new medications are discovered but because many human lives have been saved. This is an important thing because it has brought solutions to many human diseases. These amazing tests should also keep going because the. In conclusion, animals that are used make sure that the new medications are safe for people to use. Animal testing should continue in order to save so many people's lives.
Ever since animal testing had begun for human research we have been able to develop a ton of cures that have saved millions of lives. This perspective states that animal testing is good because it helps us humans as a species find cures for something we never would've thought the cure would be. Evidence has shown that every big major medical breakthrough in the last 100 years has come directly through animal testing. Without animal testing we would never have had penicillin antibiotics. Penicillin was discovered in 1928 by Sir Howard Florey, but in the 1940’s while testing the penicillin in animals, a researcher injected a lethal amount of bacteria in 8 mice and had given penicillin to 4. The 4 mice that received the penicillin survived while
The article’s main argument consisted of animal testing is really unreliable and unnecessary. To support their argument that animal testing is unnecessary it provided research studies that were done in the 1960’s. The research study consisted of scientist forcing animals to breathe tobacco smoke to prove that they would not develop lung cancer. Since the animals did not develop lung cancer, scientist concluded that humans would not develop lung cancer as well. Tobacco companies took advantage of this study and persuaded their consumers to keep buying their products. Consumers bought the products and eventually developed lung cancer. The article argued that animals and humans react differently to chemicals since every species has different organs.
According to AALAS, we need to thank animal research for the vaccines that have helped kids around the world be healthy. AALAS firmly believes that animal research has been a crucial part of medical drugs that could even potentially control high blood pressure that can lead to strokes and anti-animal research supporters can't overlook it. Ph.D. Derbyshire, another pro-animal research, also thinks possible cures for diseases such as Alzheimer's, clinical obesity, and infertility all rely on animals.
One of the achievements of using lab animals is Flemming’s discovery of Penicillin’s use of the human body. Although the
Animal Experimentation has been used for thousands of years from early Greeks to modern day physicians. Animal Experimentation is not only beneficial in gaining knowledge on diseases, but can also help to discover cures.
On the one hand, it is widely acknowledged that animals experimentation has been beneficial to humans in different ways. First of all, animal research is a necessary measure and the only safe way to save human lives. In other words, this research has saved and improved the lives of millions of people. People have probably all benefited from vaccines and
Animals should be used for research and Experimentation because if the animals get sick or show any signs of acting abnormal then the scientists know it isn’t safe for humans to use. Animal research has played a big role in nearly every medical breakthrough over the last decade. Animals have the same organ system that perform the same task, which helps determine if what is being tested is safe for humans to use. Most of the medicines animals use the same medicine as humans like antibiotics, pain killers, and many more this helps to see if the medicine cures the animals without any harmful consequences then it would be safe and useful for humans to use.
Should animals be used in medical research?” Animal experiments have increased scientific knowledge and also increased the life expectance of mankind from 30-40 years in the eighteenth century to 70-80 years today” (Brune, 50). Overall, science has proved beneficial to mankind, and even in the future, it will prove helpful to cure fatal disease like cancer and HIV. As long as science uses animals for mankind’s good, there should not any ban on using animals in laboratories.