Vivisection, the practice of experimenting on animals, began because of
religious prohibitions against the dissection of human corpses. When
religious leaders finally lifted these prohibitions, it was too late -
vivisection was already entrenched in medical and educational institutions.
Estimates of the number of animals tortured and killed annually in U.S.
laboratories diverge widely - from 17 to 70 million animals.(1) The Animal
Welfare Act requires laboratories to report the number of animals used in
experiments, but the Act does not cover mice, rats, and birds (used in some
80 to 90 percent of all experiments).(2) Because these animals are not
covered by the Act, they remain uncounted and we can only guess at how many
actually suffer and die each year.
The largest breeding company in the United States is Charles River
Breeding Laboratories (CRBL) headquartered in Massachusetts and owned by
Bausch and Lomb. It commands 40-50 percent of the market for mice, rats,
guinea pigs, hamsters, gerbils, rhesus monkeys, imported primates, and
miniature swine. (3)
Since mice and rats are not protected under Animal Welfare Act
regulations, the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) does not
require that commercial breeders of these rodents be registered or that the
USDA's Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) inspect such
establishments. (4)
Dogs and cats are also used in experiments. They come from breeders like CRBL, some animal shelters and pounds, and organized "bunchers" who pick up strays, purchase litters from unsuspecting people who allow their companion animals to become pregnant, obtain animals from "Free to a Good Home" advertisements, or trap and steal the animals. Birds, frogs, pigs, sheep, cattle, and many naturally free-roaming animals (e.g., prairie dogs and owls) are also common victims of experimentation. At this writing, animals traditionally raised for food are covered by Animal Welfare Act regulations only minimally, and on a temporary basis, when used in, for example, heart transplant experiments; but they are not covered at all when used in agriculture studies. Unfortunately, vivisectors are using more and more animals whom they consider less "cute," because, although they know these animals suffer just as much, they believe people won't object as strenuously to the torture of a pig or a rat as they will to that of a dog or a rabbit.
Paying for Pain
The National Institutes of Health (NIH) in the United States is the
world's largest funder of animal experiments. It dispenses seven billion
tax dollars in grants annually, of which about $5 billion goes toward
studies involving animals.(5) The Department of Defense spent about $180
million on experiments using 553,000 animals in 1993. Although this figure
represents a 36% increase in the number of animals used over the past
decade, the military offered no detailed rationale in its own reports or at
Congressional hearings.(6) Examples of torturous taxpayer-funded
experiments at military facilities include wound experiments, radiation
experiments, studies on the effects of chemical warfare, and other deadly
and maiming procedures.
Private institutions and companies also invest in the vivisection
industry. Many household product and cosmetics companies still pump their
products into animals' stomachs, rub them onto their shaved, abraded skin,
squirt them into their eyes, and force them to inhale aerosol products.
Charities, such as the American Cancer Society and the March of Dimes, use
donations from private citizens to fund experiments on animals.
Agricultural experiments are carried out on cattle, sheep, pigs,
chickens, and turkeys to find ways in which to make cows produce more milk,
sheep produce more wool, and all animals produce more offspring and grow
"meatier."
Bad Science
There are many reasons to oppose vivisection. For example, enormous
physiological variations exist among rats, rabbits, dogs, pigs, and human
beings. A 1989 study to determine the carcinogenicity of fluoride
illustrated this fact. Approximately 520 rats and 520 mice were given daily
doses of the mineral for two years. Not one mouse was adversely affected by
the fluoride, but the rats experienced health problems including cancer of
the mouth and bone. As test data cannot accurately be extrapolated from a
mouse to a rat, it can't be argued that data can accurately be extrapolated
from either species to a human.
In many cases, animal studies do not just hurt animals and waste money;
they harm and kill people, too. The drugs thalidomide, Zomax, and DES were
all tested on animals and judged safe but had devastating consequences
for the humans who used them. A General Accounting Office report, released in May 1990, found that more than half of the prescription drugs approved by the Food and Drug Administration between 1976 and 1985 caused side effects that were serious enough to cause the drugs to be withdrawn from the market or relabeled. All of these drugs had been tested on animals.
Animal experimentation also misleads researchers in their studies. Dr.
Albert Sabin, who developed the oral polio vaccine, cited in testimony at a
congressional hearing this example of the dangers of animal-based research:
"[p]aralytic polio could be dealt with only by preventing the irreversible
destruction of the large number of motor nerve cells, and the work on
prevention was delayed by an erroneous conception of the nature of the
human disease based on misleading experimental models of the disease in
monkeys." (7)
Healing Without Hurting
The Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine reports that
sophisticated non-animal research methods are more accurate, less
expensive, and less time-consuming than traditional animal-based research
methods. Patients waiting for helpful drugs and treatments could be spared
years of suffering if companies and government agencies would implement the
efficient alternatives to animal studies. Fewer accidental deaths caused by
drugs and treatments would occur if stubborn bureaucrats and wealthy
vivisectors would use the more accurate alternatives. And tax dollars would
be better spent preventing human suffering in the first place through
education programs and medical assistance programs for low-income
individuals--helping the more than 30 million U.S. citizens who cannot
afford health insurance--rather than making animals sick. Most killer
diseases in this country (heart disease, cancer, and stroke) can be
prevented by eating a low-fat, vegetarian diet, refraining from smoking and
alcohol abuse, and exercising regularly. These simple lifestyle changes can
also help prevent arthritis, adult-onset diabetes, ulcers, and a long list
of other illnesses.
It is not surprising that those who make money experimenting on animals
or supplying vivisectors with cages, restraining devices, food for caged
animals (like the Lab Chow made by Purina Mills), and tiny guillotines to
destroy animals whose lives are no longer considered useful insist that
nearly every medical advance has been made through the use of animals.
Although every drug and procedure must now be tested on animals before
hitting the market, this does not mean that animal studies are invaluable,
irreplaceable, or even of minor importance or that alternative methods
could not have been used.
Dr. Charles Mayo, founder of the Mayo Clinic, explains, "I abhor
vivisection. It should at least be curbed. Better, it should be abolished.
I know of no achievement through vivisection, no scientific discovery, that
could not have been obtained without such barbarism and cruelty. The whole
thing is evil." (8)
Dr. Edward Kass, of the Harvard Medical School, said in a speech he gave to the Infectious Disease Society of America: "[I]t was not medical research that had stamped out tuberculosis, diphtheria, pneumonia and puerperal sepsis; the primary credit for those monumental accomplishments must go to public health, sanitation and the general improvement in the standard of living brought about by industrialization."(9)
Changing the System
Write to your legislators today to express your concern for animals used
in experiments. Urge them to do everything in their power to push
researchers out of the Dark Ages where animals are still butchered in the
name of science.
Write to People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals for a free
factsheet detailing the many humane alternatives to vivisection.
References
- Orlans, F. Barbara, "Data on Animal Experimentation in the United
States: What They Do and Do Not Show," Perspectives in Biology and
Medicine, 37, 2. Winter 1994.
- Ibid.
- Reddy, Kal, THETA Corporation, Research Animal Markets Report, No.
982, September 1989.
- Soos, Troy, "Charles River Breeding Labs," The Animals'
Agenda, Dec. 1986, p. 10.
- Stoller, Kenneth, M.D., "Animal Testing: Why a Doctor Opposes It,"
The Orlando Sentinel, June 25, 1990.
- Krizmanic, Judy, "Military Increases Animal Experiments,"
Vegetarian Times, August 1994.
- Stoller, op. cit.
- Quoted by William H. Hendrix, New York Daily News, Mar. 13,
1961.
- Prouix, Lawrence, "A History of Progress," Washington Post, Feb. 21, 1995.
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