Their intentions were to advance scientific understanding, to develop solutions to medical problems and to protect the safety of people, animals and the environment ( ). Animals are used to demonstrate a whole human body to find out more about diseases and other parts in the body and …show more content…
Animals do not have their own voice and are forced to be a subject and undergo these inhumane treatments. There are many benefits to animal testing like bettering the lives of humans and preventing some illnesses and diseases but is it really worth risking the lives of animals? The end result might not even be successful, 95% of the medical trials done on animals fail on humans regardless of the promising results in animals testing. It is understandable that products and medications should be tested before use, but there are many alternatives that could improve the natural course of life. Instead of using living animals, why aren’t humans on death row subjects, or computer simulations that could recreate the effect of drugs instead of using living creatures? Animal experementing is also too expensive due to all of the animals that have to be cared for, like food, water, housing and other treatments. Every year more than fifty billion dollars are spent each year on experiments that have the chances of being …show more content…
Risking the lives of animals , and treating them inhumane for beauty purposes is unacceptable. These animals are not protected and have no rights for themselves. Animals do not get the same types of diseases as humans do, and medications being tested are harmful to them. Animals aren’t chosen properly for the experiment, and should weigh way more than seventy kilograms; however animals like mice, rats and rabbits are always a subject experimented on. What is mentally deranging is that some experiments that inflict pain to animals aren’t even violating the law. The outcome is not worth the pain inflicted. “ Of over 1,000 potential stroke treatments that had been successful in animal tests, on average only approximately 10% progressed to human trials. None worked sufficiently with