BENEFITS, NECESSITY AND JUSTIFICATION IN ANIMAL RESEARCH

Citation
M. Jennings et S. Silcock, BENEFITS, NECESSITY AND JUSTIFICATION IN ANIMAL RESEARCH, ATLA. Alternatives to laboratory animals, 23(6), 1995, pp. 828-836
Citations number
40
Categorie Soggetti
Veterinary Sciences
ISSN journal
02611929
Volume
23
Issue
6
Year of publication
1995
Pages
828 - 836
Database
ISI
SICI code
0261-1929(1995)23:6<828:BNAJIA>2.0.ZU;2-Z
Abstract
The cost-benefit assessment in the Animals (Scientific Procedures) Act 1986 is said to ensure that animals are only used in experiments whic h are justified and necessary. The way in which the Home Office Inspec torate derives the cost-benefit assessment is explained in the Report of the Animal Procedures Committee for 1993. However, evaluation of bo th costs and benefits is largely subjective, as are concepts such as ' 'necessity'' and ''justification''. These concepts mean different thin gs to different people in different places and at different times, dep ending on the pressures to which they are subject. These include the s ocio-economic climate and the context in which the proposed research i s to be carried out. Animal use cannot, therefore, be said to be neces sary and/or beneficial unless serious questions are answered with resp ect to who or what the research is necessary for, who or what will ben efit from it and who defines the criteria used in the justification pr ocess. Retrospective analysis of whether the proposed benefit was actu ally achieved and applied is also important. Discussion regarding the necessity, benefits and justification of individual research projects, and of overall research goals or directions, tends to be obscured by the polarised debate over the morality and scientific validity of anim al experiments as a whole. This paper raises some of the issues that c ould be discussed in a wider view of the cost-benefit assessment, with reference to selected areas of animal use as examples.