Your opinion. Is it ethical to use animals for scientific research?

I'm sorry to say this but feel it is necessary for certain types of testing, primarily medical and drug testing. Science is always evolving and many types of test can now be replicated in a lab using non living host, but not 100% yet.

I'm not sure how to qualify the ethics question though. Is it worth sacrificing a thousand rats to discover a cure that would save thousands upon thousands of people? I would have to say yes. Should we sacrifice a thousand rats to find a better shade of lipstick? Hell no.
 
For decades, the medical world felt that a "whole living system" (like an animal) was the only way to see how a drug would react. But as you noted, animals are sensitive beings, and many scientists now agree that they aren't even the best "mirrors" for human biology.

There is indeed a holistic, high-tech way forward that is moving us toward a world without animal sacrifice. Here are the three pillars of this new "animal-free" medicine :


I'm sorry to say this but feel it is necessary for certain types of testing, primarily medical and drug testing. Science is always evolving and many types of test can now be replicated in a lab using non living host, but not 100% yet.

I'm not sure how to qualify the ethics question though. Is it worth sacrificing a thousand rats to discover a cure that would save thousands upon thousands of people? I would have to say yes. Should we sacrifice a thousand rats to find a better shade of lipstick? Hell no.

1. "Organ-on-a-Chip" (The Patient Avatar)

Instead of using a monkey or a mouse, scientists now use a small clear slide, about the size of a computer memory stick, called an Organ-on-a-Chip.

  • How it works: They take actual human stem cells and grow them into tiny, functioning versions of a human heart, lung, or liver inside the chip.
  • The Connection: They can then link a "liver chip" to a "heart chip" using tiny tubes that mimic blood flow. This allows them to see how a drug travels through a human system without ever touching a living creature. It is actually more accurate because it uses human DNA, not animal DNA.

2. "In Silico" (The Digital Twin)

Silico is the term for medical research done entirely inside a computer.

  • AI Simulations: We now have AI models (like AlphaFold) that can predict exactly how a protein or a drug will "fold" and interact with a human cell.
  • Virtual Humans: Scientists have created "Digital Twins"—vast computer models of the human body—that can run 10,000 "virtual" experiments in a single afternoon. This does in seconds what used to take years of animal testing.

3. The 2025 "FDA Roadmap"

You’ll be glad to know that the law is finally catching up to your feelings. In April 2025, the FDA released a landmark "roadmap" to officially phase out mandatory animal testing.

  • The Shift: For the first time in history, drug companies are being encouraged to skip the animal phase if they can prove their drug is safe using these "New Approach Methodologies" (NAMs).
  • The Goal: The goal is to move from "Replacement and Reduction" to full Exclusion of animals in the coming years.
 
While testing on animals seems cruel unless an alternative way that produces the information needed I don't see another way. I think I remember reading about the polio vaccine causing death in humans until it was perfected. But as C50 posted science is moving forward.
 
For decades, the medical world felt that a "whole living system" (like an animal) was the only way to see how a drug would react. But as you noted, animals are sensitive beings, and many scientists now agree that they aren't even the best "mirrors" for human biology.

There is indeed a holistic, high-tech way forward that is moving us toward a world without animal sacrifice. Here are the three pillars of this new "animal-free" medicine :




1. "Organ-on-a-Chip" (The Patient Avatar)

Instead of using a monkey or a mouse, scientists now use a small clear slide, about the size of a computer memory stick, called an Organ-on-a-Chip.

  • How it works: They take actual human stem cells and grow them into tiny, functioning versions of a human heart, lung, or liver inside the chip.
  • The Connection: They can then link a "liver chip" to a "heart chip" using tiny tubes that mimic blood flow. This allows them to see how a drug travels through a human system without ever touching a living creature. It is actually more accurate because it uses human DNA, not animal DNA.

2. "In Silico" (The Digital Twin)

Silico is the term for medical research done entirely inside a computer.

  • AI Simulations: We now have AI models (like AlphaFold) that can predict exactly how a protein or a drug will "fold" and interact with a human cell.
  • Virtual Humans: Scientists have created "Digital Twins"—vast computer models of the human body—that can run 10,000 "virtual" experiments in a single afternoon. This does in seconds what used to take years of animal testing.

3. The 2025 "FDA Roadmap"

You’ll be glad to know that the law is finally catching up to your feelings. In April 2025, the FDA released a landmark "roadmap" to officially phase out mandatory animal testing.

  • The Shift: For the first time in history, drug companies are being encouraged to skip the animal phase if they can prove their drug is safe using these "New Approach Methodologies" (NAMs).
  • The Goal: The goal is to move from "Replacement and Reduction" to full Exclusion of animals in the coming years.
I am more than pleased to be proven wrong on this topic. If indeed animal testing can be avoided it should be, and if there are qualified alternatives available 100% of the time than ban the practice for sure.
 
Is it ethical? I’m not sure about that, but if experimenting on an animal aids humanity, I would be more OK with it. However, I have known and spoken with a scientist who has only tested certain strains of viruses only to find out what reaction was obtained. Is that necessary? The one and only scientist that I ever spoke with told me after he finished his test, the rabbit used was destroyed.
 
The discovery of penicillin by Alexander Fleming in 1928, and its subsequent development into a usable drug by Howard Florey and Ernst Chain, is widely regarded as one of the top most important medical breakthroughs in human history. Fleming tested early penicillin on rabbits and mice to check it's toxicity.
Later, in 1940, the Oxford team conducted the decisive mouse protection test, infecting mice with lethal bacteria and proving that penicillin-treated mice survived, whilst the untreated died, providing the first clear evidence of its systemic effectiveness.
The best estimate of lives saved by the discovery of penicillin and the subsequent development of antibiotics is widely cited as being over 500 million. I won't be mourning a few rodents that gave their lives in penicillin's discovery.
 
The US gave all animals in the ape family constitutional rights equal to minors and disabled people, including the right to be protected from experimentation and all things non-consensual. I forget when. I don't think it was very long ago; couple decades, maybe.

I think the only mammal used for experimentation these days is mice, and science and technology is fast approaching a time when that won't be necessary. Scientists are already making human skin and some human organ tissues for the purpose of experimentation and product testing.
 
Animals are killed every day for human consumption, why not mention that?
That isn't a fair comparison, though. Food animals are killed quickly and (reputedly) humanely. Lab animals are subjected to various infections, mental trauma, chemical poisoning, and injury, and left to suffer with it until some outcome is reached.
 
That isn't a fair comparison, though. Food animals are killed quickly and (reputedly) humanely. Lab animals are subjected to various infections, mental trauma, chemical poisoning, and injury, and left to suffer with it until some outcome is reached.
Food animals are killed quickly but many live gruesome lives prior to death, and the killing and slaughtering process is more brutal than most people could stomach.
 
Food animals are killed quickly but many live gruesome lives prior to death, and the killing and slaughtering process is more brutal than most people could stomach.
That varies a bit, but there are laws (lots of them), including laws about animal treatment, and all food animal farms and ranches are regulated by APHIS and the Dept of Ag to make sure they aren't violating any.

The animal's lives are definitely restricted, but the only gruesome thing I've seen (personally) is the way some of them are force-fed. I saw that on a pig farm. It was pretty hideous.

Food animals are intelligent beings. Even chickens and turkeys have some intelligence, imo. The treatment of all of them needs a lot of improvement.
 
We wouldn't have the polio vaccine if it couldn't have been tested on humans. My father was employed all his working days at a major pharmaceutical firm, including time in the animal labs, working on a polio vaccine as well as insulin testing, rabies vaccine production, and many others.
 
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