
NO Experiments on
Animal
Each year, more than 100 million animals are murdered in U.S. laboratories for biology lessons, medical training, and experimentations for chemicals, drugs, food, and cosmetics testing. Throughout long periods of history, many of the benefits toward human beings are brought by the sacrifices of the animals. It had a very important role of leading to more new discovery in the fields of science, medicine, etc. During these years, animal experimentation has been a serious problem that is shown to the public. Is the animal testing necessary for the purpose of benefiting the human beings? Some people may agree to use the animal experimentations, since they believe that testing unstable products on animals is better than testing on human. However, some may disagree with this issue because of feeling sorry toward the animals. I believe that it is an unethical idea to do experiments on animals, because the unethical of causing millions of death in lab every year, the alternatives for animal experiments, animal have a different body formation than human and also the large amount of economic cost.
FACTS
approximately 100,000-200,000 animals suffer and die just for cosmetics every year around the world. These are rabbits, guinea pigs, hamsters, rats and mice. While dogs and monkeys are never used to test cosmetics anywhere in the world, they are used to test other types of chemicals.



Several cosmetic tests commonly performed on mice, rats, rabbits, and guinea pigs include: skin and eye irritation tests where chemicals are rubbed on shaved skin or dripped into the eyes without any pain relief.


Europe, the world’s largest cosmetic market, Israel and India have already banned animal testing for cosmetics, and the sale or import of newly animal-tested beauty products.
How Animal Experiments for cosmetics work?
Alternatives to the use of animals in testing & the bennefits
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in vitro (test tube) test methods and models based on human cell and tissue cultures
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computerized patient-drug databases and virtual drug trials
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computer models and simulations
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stem cell and genetic testing methods
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non-invasive imaging techniques such as MRIs and CT Scans
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microdosing (in which humans are given very low quantities of a drug to test the effects on the body on the cellular level, without affecting the whole body system)
Benefits of non-animal testing
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Alternative scientific tests are often more reliable than animal tests.
For example, experiments on rats, hamsters, guinea pigs, mice, monkeys, and baboons revealed no link between glass fibers and cancer. Only after human studies related the two did the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) label these fibers as carcinogenic. EpiDerm, an in vitrotest derived from cultured human skin cells, was found to be more accurate in identifying chemical skin irritants than traditional animal tests. In comparison studies, EpiDerm correctly detected all of the test chemicals that irritate human skin, while tests on rabbits misclassified 10 out of 25 test chemicals—a full 40% error rate.
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The use of human tissue in toxicity testing is more accurate than the animal models.
The “Lethal Dose 50” (LD50) test forces animals to ingest toxic and lethal substances to the endpoint of where 50% of the animals in the study die—and those that do not are later killed. The late Dr. Bjӧrn Ekwall (Cytotoxicology Laboratory in Sweden) developed a replacement for the LD50 test that measured toxicity at a precision rate of up to 85% accuracy compared to the LD50 rate of 61-65%. This test, far more accurate than the animal models, uses donated human tissue rather than animal. Further, the test can target toxic effects on specific human organs, whether or not the toxic substance permeates the blood barrier, and other highly sophisticated and precise information that the agonizing death of an animal of a different species would not reveal.
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Non-animal tests are more cost-effective, practical, and expedient.
InVitro International’s Corrositex (synthetic skin) can provide a chemical corrosivity determination in as little as 3 minutes to four hours, unlike animal testing that often takes two to four weeks. DakDak, an alternative test used to measure the effectiveness of sunscreens, was reported to do in days what it takes animal studies months to do, and estimates that it can test five or six products for less than half the cost to study a single product in animals. The traditional testing of chemicals using animals can take up to five years per substance and cost millions of dollars, while non-animal alternatives can test hundreds of chemicals in a week for a fraction of the cost.
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Cruelty-free products are more environmentally friendly.
In toxicity testing, researchers breed, test, and ultimately dispose of millions of animals as pathogenic or hazardous waste. Cruelty-free testing is less harmful to the environment or creates less waste.