YOUR EXCELLENCY:
YOU CAN START BY SEEING THESE VIDEOS, SPECIALY WITH YOUR HEART...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZzbAjTpC1EQ
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ynh2A0FjryM
"...After feeding and cleaning, the rest of the chimpanzee's day is often spent waiting and doing almost nothing, which can lead to stereotypies (repetitive behavior such as pacing or self-biting). At the very least, those socially housed have the comfort and company of each other. Anxiety, however, is always present.
Veterinarians and veterinary technicians come and go (which can be stressful for the animals as these are not always people they look forward to seeing). Chimpanzees and their roommates may be taken away for veterinary or research procedures, or they may be fasted in anticipation of procedures. Knockdowns (injecting or darting an animal with anesthetic) and some procedures are done in the animal room, which can obviously cause anxiety to the chimpanzees who witness them.
Chimpanzees living in outdoor enclosures typically experience less stress, without the hosing of their cages or people coming and going within close quarters.
Those used in active research protocols have a similar routine to those not being used. However, in addition to being housed alone, their day might include any number of invasive procedures, such as liver biopsies; blood sampling; knockdowns; injection or other exposure to infectious disease; and safety, efficacy or potency testing of pharmaceuticals or vaccines..."(
After feeding and cleaning, the rest of the chimpanzee's day is often spent waiting and doing almost nothing, which can lead to stereotypies (repetitive behavior such as pacing or self-biting). At the very least, those socially housed have the comfort and company of each other. Anxiety, however, is always present.
Veterinarians and veterinary technicians come and go (which can be stressful for the animals as these are not always people they look forward to seeing). Chimpanzees and their roommates may be taken away for veterinary or research procedures, or they may be fasted in anticipation of procedures. Knockdowns (injecting or darting an animal with anesthetic) and some procedures are done in the animal room, which can obviously cause anxiety to the chimpanzees who witness them.
Chimpanzees living in outdoor enclosures typically experience less stress, without the hosing of their cages or people coming and going within close quarters.
Those used in active research protocols have a similar routine to those not being used. However, in addition to being housed alone, their day might include any number of invasive procedures, such as liver biopsies; blood sampling; knockdowns; injection or other exposure to infectious disease; and safety, efficacy or potency testing of pharmaceuticals or vaccines.
After feeding and cleaning, the rest of the chimpanzee's day is often spent waiting and doing almost nothing, which can lead to stereotypies (repetitive behavior such as pacing or self-biting). At the very least, those socially housed have the comfort and company of each other. Anxiety, however, is always present.
Veterinarians and veterinary technicians come and go (which can be stressful for the animals as these are not always people they look forward to seeing). Chimpanzees and their roommates may be taken away for veterinary or research procedures, or they may be fasted in anticipation of procedures. Knockdowns (injecting or darting an animal with anesthetic) and some procedures are done in the animal room, which can obviously cause anxiety to the chimpanzees who witness them.
Chimpanzees living in outdoor enclosures typically experience less stress, without the hosing of their cages or people coming and going within close quarters.
Those used in active research protocols have a similar routine to those not being used. However, in addition to being housed alone, their day might include any number of invasive procedures, such as liver biopsies; blood sampling; knockdowns; injection or other exposure to infectious disease; and safety, efficacy or potency testing of pharmaceuticals or vaccines..."
After feeding and cleaning, the rest of the chimpanzee's day is often spent waiting and doing almost nothing, which can lead to stereotypies (repetitive behavior such as pacing or self-biting). At the very least, those socially housed have the comfort and company of each other. Anxiety, however, is always present.
Veterinarians and veterinary technicians come and go (which can be stressful for the animals as these are not always people they look forward to seeing). Chimpanzees and their roommates may be taken away for veterinary or research procedures, or they may be fasted in anticipation of procedures. Knockdowns (injecting or darting an animal with anesthetic) and some procedures are done in the animal room, which can obviously cause anxiety to the chimpanzees who witness them.
Chimpanzees living in outdoor enclosures typically experience less stress, without the hosing of their cages or people coming and going within close quarters.
Those used in active research protocols have a similar routine to those not being used. However, in addition to being housed alone, their day might include any number of invasive procedures, such as liver biopsies; blood sampling; knockdowns; injection or other exposure to infectious disease; and safety, efficacy or potency testing of pharmaceuticals or vaccines..." (quoted from: http://www.hsus.org/animals_in_research/chimps_deserve_better/meet-the-chimps/a_day_in_the_life.html)
"...Dreams often change on their way to reality"
"... I first went to NYU%u2019s primate research lab called the Laboratory for Experimental Medicine and Surgery in Primates (LEMSIP) in 1991 to check it out after seeing an article about the place in our local newspaper. There were pictures of baby chimpanzees being rocked in rocking chairs by staff garbed in surgical masks and gowns.
"%u2026what was so humbling was how much love and affection the chimpanzees and monkeys gave to us - the humans on the OTHER side of the bars - the ones who had the keys, the ones who did everything (good and bad) to them, the ones who controlled their lives, the ones who were expecting them to withstand conditions that we would never put each other through.
I was appalled and I think the public would be as well if they were aware of the wasted dollars and lives that are consumed by labs, behind closed doors, day after day, under the guise of necessary science to save our lives.%u2014 Nancy Megna
I had heard about LEMSIP the year before as a place that did biomedical research on nonhuman primates %u2013 monkeys and chimpanzees. I had immediately dismissed it as a place that I wouldn%u2019t likely associate with since I had strong feelings against the use of animals in biomedical research. I was going to college to learn about primate behavior and conservation. This article talked about how some of the people who worked there, particularly the Chief Veterinarian, Dr. Jim Mahoney tried to make %u201Cthe best of the worst%u201D meaning that they tried to make the lives of the monkeys and chimpanzees there a little less horrid under the severely deprived conditions and harsh realities of the lab. They had a volunteer program, which is very unusual for biomedical labs since they typically have very %u201Cclosed door%u201D policies.
I decided that I had better go and see for myself. What was going on there? What were they doing to the monkeys and chimpanzees? What kind of people worked there?
Once I met and connected with those baby chimpanzees facing a lifetime in research I asked just one question: What could I do to help them? ..." (quoted from: http://www.releasechimps.org/harm-suffering/eyewitnesses-from-the-lab/nancy/)
Chimps share 90% of their DNA with us , that includes some emotions: depression, anxiety, and diseases with us like AIDS. It is almost like testing medicine and cosmetics upon a child since that is the chimps%u2019 sensibility: of a human child: IT IS UNHUMAN AND SHAMEFUL! We are suppose to be the rational ones! Animals are never cruel as we can be. Why do scientists only see science from one side, hasn`t science proved what I just said about chimps? So why ignore it? NO SERIOUS AND HONEST: OR VALUEBLE SCIENTIST WOULD EVER BE THIS DISONEST AND UNSCIENTIFICAL! ... See more
I would rather eat dirt than be that kind of scientist.
The fact that chimps have those characteristics don`t make them the only case, only the most serious one of all, because all animals used suffer and scream and feel the pain, and like I said: I rather steal than being that kind of scientist.
Sure you will say: how do we make medicine then? How do we cure diseases?
Many medicine also tested have been taken out of the market for their side effects, dangerous side effects DETECTED ONLY ON HUMANS! IT AIN`T THE SAME FELLOWS...
And it is all so much more dirty when there is no need for these tests on chimps or even animals:
1.Animals are often poor substitutes for humans, and some compounds that may well cause no harm to an animal, could seriously harm a human being. Likewise, a drug that is toxic to the animal it is tested on, may have no toxicity, and even therapeutic benefits in humans.
2. Studies have suggested that micro-dosing(where only a tiny amount of a product is given to a human through the skin) could be a new and very effective alternative to animal experiments 7. The recent news that scientists have grown a small piece of human liver tissue from stem cells could also mean that it may one day be possible to perform initial 'human' safety trials in a lab.
3. Pain and suffering still occur, and simply being in captivity can cause great distress to an animal, just as it would to a human. Plus, animal testing facilities cannot be monitored at all times, so the sort of treatment animals receive on a daily basis can never truly be known.
OTHER, WELL BASED REASONS:
Most scientists and governments say they agree that animal testing should cause as little suffering as possible, and that alternatives to animal testing need to be developed. The "three Rs",first described by Russell and Burch in 1959, are guiding principles for the use of animals in research in many countries:
THE EFFECTS ON THEM:
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/1803007
http://www.pbs.org/wnet/nature/episodes/chimpanzees-an-unnatural-history/alternatives-to-chimp-testing/2500/
It is done in America for example, people test some medicines and get payed for it. THIS IS MUCH MORE RELIABLE TESTING THAN ANIMAL TESTING!
IN FACT THIS IS A LINK DEDICATED TO THE ALTERNATIVES:
http://altweb.jhsph.edu/
ALSO THESE BARBARIAN CONNTENT OF THESE CHILLING YOUTUBE VIDEOS...SHAME ON YOU! SCIENTISTS DOING THIS TO CREATURES THAT ARE SO CLOSE IN EVERYTHING TO US!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ROOtB1dlfQQ
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZzbAjTpC1EQ
Computer simulation Examples of computer simulations available include models of diabetes, asthma, and drug absorption, though potential new medicines identified using these techniques are currently still required to be verified in animal and human tests before licensing. Computer operated mannequins, also known as crash test dummies, complete with internal sensors and video, have replaced live animal trauma testing for automobile crash testing. The first of these was
ARE THE SCIENTISTS CARRER AND BELLY BUTTONS THE ONLY THING THEY SEE? DO YOU THINK HUMANS , REAL HUMANS...WANT THIS TESTINGS TO GO ON? NO!
THANK YOU FOR YOUR TIME
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