A- Hastings center Flashcards
1
Q
A1 JSTOR Hastings center report, No Animals Harmed:Toward a Paradigm Shift in Toxicity Testing
A
Actual testing on animals
- continuing use of animals for testing will result in the killing of millions
- not clear how often animal models have led researchers down the wrong path because results were not applicable to humans
2
Q
A2 no animals harmed: toward a paradigm shift in toxicity testing
A
Alternative
- based on human cell systems
- more predictive
- higher throughput
- cost less
- more comparable to real life situations
- uses fewer animals
- signals a major change in focus and promotes development of new approaches to understanding toxicity of chemicals in humans
3
Q
A3 no animals harmed
A
Different chemical concentrations
- human exposures to chemicals occur at low concentrations
- animals would have to be treated with high levels of concentrations to to detect effects
- more animals, time, and money needed
- results with high dose on animals differ from the low concentration exposed to humans
- scientists must extrapolate
4
Q
A4 no animals harmed
A
- results are obtained from rats and mice, different chemical responses as humans
- toxicity tests in rodents predict human toxicity on 43% of the time
- uncertainty factor must be applied
5
Q
A5 no animals harmed
A
Ethical concerns
- number of animals that would be required for a full testing
- testing protocols involve pain, distress, or both to the animals
- major animal welfare issue
6
Q
A6 No animals harmed
A
Toxicity testing on the 21st century (report)
- proposed a major change in toxicity testing
- shift from charting effects on animals to mapping in human cells with minimal animal use
- expected to result in an adverse effect at the cellular level and may lead to an adverse health effect for the organism - instead of dosing an animal and looking at results, involves measuring changes in the molecules of the cell in response
7
Q
A7 no animals harmed
A
- forecasts the eventual end for the need for animals in toxicity testing
- advances can also benefit the future of animal use for biomedical research
- it is likely that animals will eventually become obsolete for research to benefit humans