Sunday, December 31, 2006

Artifact # 6: HISTORY OF ANIMAL TESTING

History
http://www.answers.com/topic/animal-testing

Questions

  1. Where would our technology be if we didn't use animals for some tests?

Artifact # 5: WHERE DO THE ANIMALS COME FROM AND WHERE DO THEY GO?

ANIMAL TESTING: Where Do the Animals Come From?
2005. ASPCA. http://www.animaland.org/asp/realissues/testing4.asp

  • Most scientists buy the animals from animal dealers: Class A and Class B licensed dealers
  • Class A Dealers: can only sell animals that they have bred
  • Class B Dealers: can sell animals that they get from respectable places, some can pick up strays off of the street
  • 31 states, Class B dealers can take animals from shelters and sell them to laboratories
  • "In five states (Iowa, Minnesota, Oklahoma, South Dakota, and Utah) shelters are required to surrender animals to any class B dealers who ask for them."
  • "14 states have passed laws making it illegal for animals in shelters to be sold for research. These states are Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Vermont, and West Virginia. It is illegal in all 50 states for stolen animals to be sold or used in research. "

ANIMAL TESTING: Where Do They Go After the Research Is Done? http://www.animaland.org/asp/realissues/testing5.asp

  • Most animals are only used for one experiment, but could be used for more
  • Most animals don't live their whole life in the lab
  • Some are euthanized after being used
  • Euthanize: To kill a human or other animal as painlessly as possible
  • "Animals of all ages are used in research, so an animal may be euthanized soon after (or before) it is born, or it may live for its entire life and die of natural causes."

Questions

  1. Instead of wasting drugs to kill the animals, why don't they find ways to put them up for adoption?
  2. For dealers who get animals from shelters, do they have to wait a certain amount of days until they can get the animals or do they just take them that day?

Artifact #4: HOW ARE ANIMALS TREATED IN LABORATORIES?

ANIMAL TESTING: How Are Animals Treated in Laboratories?
2005. ASPCA. http://www.animaland.org/asp/realissues/testing2.asp

Small Animals: hamsters, gerbils, rats, mice, and guinea pigs

  • Live in cages a little bigger than shoeboxes, wood chips cover the bottom and a wire netting covers the top
  • More than one animal lives in a cage
  • Food and water hang so the animals can reach them

Larger Animals: Cats, dogs, and primates

  • Live in wire cages
  • Monkeys might live with other primates, but most large animals live alone
  • Primates may be moved to a bigger cage, so they can play. But other animals stay in their cage, unless they are used for experiments
  • Laws insure that the cages are kept warm, clean, and big enough

"...1.4 million animals counted by the USDA that are used in research do not feel pain from the experiments.."

"...489,262 animals that were used in research last year (not including mice, rats, and birds--no one knows how many of these animals are used in research) were used in research that was either painful, distressful, or both."

"...103,764 of the animals made to feel pain were not given anything to reduce their pain and suffering. This means that more than 100,000 animals were made to feel pain and fear in 2002. Although some of this pain was slight--like getting an injection with a needle--some of it was extremely severe.. "

Questions

  1. Do all of these facilities give the animals something to do while in cages, like the primates?
  2. Are putting animals through pain deliberately, legal?

Artifact # 3: ANIMAL TESTING IS NECESSARY

Animal Testing is Necessary
Berlin, Ann. 1991. http://www.animalliberationfront.com/Philosophy/Animal%20Testing/Animal%20Testing.htm

This claim is refuted by the Research Defense Society:
  • Many human diseases can be found in animals- heart disease, cancer, and asthma
  • Some diseases are even caused by animals, so studying them would help find the cause or cure
  • "The animals which are tested on are bred for the purpose and kept in good conditions. The regulations surrounding keeping animals for scientific tests in the UK are some of the most comprehensive in the world. These regulations are defined in the Animals (Scientific Procedures) Act 1986 and include rules so places where animals are kept are inspected to ensure they are kept under certain conditions. "
  • If a procedure deals with surgery it is given anesthetics, and painkillers for discomfort
  • "Many of the alternatives suggested by animal rights activists such as tissue culture and computer modeling are already used along side animal testing. Before a potential drug is tested on animals it is put through a variety of in vitro tests to check things like toxicity and mutagenicity. If the drug doesn't perform well on these it won't go onto animal tests."
  • The effects on some drugs can not be determined from tests with tissue and other models.
  • "The interactions found in whole animals and between a mother and her embryo are so complex that to be-able to mimic them would require a lot more knowledge of what actually occurs and advances in technology which don't look set to occur for the foreseeable future. "

Questions

1.How many facilities have these conditions?

2. Not all facilities are these nice to animals, how do other businesses treat the animals?

Tuesday, December 12, 2006

Artifact # 2: ALL FOR ANIMALS

ANIMAL TESTING ALTERNATIVES

Stevens, Karen Lee. "Animal Testing Alternatives." 12 Dec 2006. http://www.allforanimals.com/alternatives1.htm



  • There are NO laws that say companies have to test their products on animals before sending it to their customers
  • The two main reasons for animal testing are: "the fear for human safety and the fear of product liability suits."
  • "Revlon Cosmetics was one of the first large companies to fund research for alternatives with a $750,000 contribution to the Rockefeller University in 1979. Several organizations such as the John Hopkins Center for the Alternatives to Animal Testing (CAAT), the International Foundation for Ethical Research, the Cosmetic, Toiletry, and Fragrance Association, and the Soap and Detergent Association followed suit and started their own programs to validate alternatives. Keep in mind that, while companies search for alternatives, animal use actually INCREASES because the old test (using animals) must be done alongside the new test (without animals) to ensure consistent results."
  • The Most Common Alternatives are:"in-vitro tests, computer software, databases of tests already done (to avoid duplication), and even human "clinical trial" tests. Use of animal cells, organs, or tissue cultures is also deemed an alternative although, obviously, animal lives are sacrificed for the use of their parts. "

Tests

  • Eytex- test tube procedure, mimics the cornea of the human eye: used by Avon
  • Skintex- uses pumpkin rind as skin
  • EpiPack- cloned human tissue
  • Neutral Red Bioassay- cultured human cells used to test dye on skin
  • Testskin- human skin grown in a sterile bag: measured skin irritancy
  • TOPKAT- computer software "that measures toxicity, mutagenicity, carcinogenicity, and teratonogenicity (this method is used by the U.S. Army, the Environmental Protection Agency, and the Food and Drug Administration)."

Wednesday, December 6, 2006

Artifact # 1:THE HUMANE SOCIETY OF THE UNITED STATES

Animal Testing
http://www.hsus.org/animals_in_research/animal_testing/index.html

  • Tests are conducted with a range of chemicals and products including: drugs, vaccines, cosmetics, household cleaners, pesticides, foodstuffs, and packing materials
  • "The safety testing of chemicals and consumer products probably accounts for only about 10 percent to 20 percent of the use of animals in laboratories, or approximately two to four million animals in the United States."
  • "It raises issues such as the ethics and humaneness of deliberately poisoning animals,
    the propriety of harming animals for the sake of marketing a new cosmetic or household product, the applicability of animal data to humans, and the possibility of sparing millions of animals by developing alternatives to a handful of widely used procedures."

I never knew that animals were tested for chemicals and materials, I thought they were just used for make-up products. Also, how that is only a small percent of the animals, and what are the other animals being used for? I also wonder, If people are willing to test animals for new products, why don't scientists invent a new way to test those products?

Species Used In Research

http://www.hsus.org/animals_in_research/species_used_in_research/

A List of Common animals used in labortories and classrooms:

  • Cat
  • Chimpanzee
  • Dog
  • Ferret
  • Guinea Pig
  • Hamster
  • Long-tailed Macaque
  • Mouse
  • Pig-tailed Macaque
  • Rabbit
  • Rat
  • Rhesus Macaque
  • White-Throated Capuchin

Class B Dealers

http://www.hsus.org/animals_in_research/class_b_dealers/

"Class B dealers are licensed by the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) to buy animals from "random sources" (meaning animals not bred or raised on the dealers' property) and sell them to animal research facilities for biomedical research, testing, and educational purposes.Such random sources for dogs and cats include auctions, flea markets, or animal shelters."

Bunchiers- another group, whom collect animals from random sources, but are not regulated

* Both groups are known to acquire "lost, stray, and "free to a good home," dogs and cats, and even pets from their owners' backyards."

The Dealers might abuse the animals they get. But with the funding the Humane Society has, they can't track down the dealers.

Tuesday, November 28, 2006

What We Know?/What We Want To Know?

KNOW:
I know that animal testing is being conducted on animals with different products, ecspecially make-up products. The animals are suffering by the side effects, including disease and death. I know that there are groups trying to fight animal testing. Some industries label there product saying if they use animals to test the product.

WANT TO KNOW:
How many groups are there that are fighting animal testing?
Are there any laws that say animal testing is illegal in areas?
What exactly are the animals used for in the testing?
What are the side effects of the testing?
If animals aren't used to test what will companies use?