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The poor contribution of chimpanzee experiments to biomedical progress
Journal article   Peer reviewed

The poor contribution of chimpanzee experiments to biomedical progress

Andrew Knight
Journal of applied animal welfare science, Vol.10(4), pp.281-308
2007
PMID: 17970631

Abstract

Animal Testing Alternatives Animal Welfare Animals Animals, Laboratory Biomedical Research - ethics Biomedical Research - statistics & numerical data Pan troglodytes United States
Biomedical research on captive chimpanzees incurs substantial nonhuman animal welfare, ethical, and financial costs that advocates claim resultin substantial advancements in biomedical knowledge. However, demonstrating minimal contribution toward the advancement of biomedical knowledge generally, subsequent papers did not cite 49.5% (47/95), of 95 experiments randomly selected from a population of 749 published worldwide between 1995 and 2004. Only 14.7% (14/95) were cited by 27 papers that abstracts indicated described well-developed methods for combating human diseases. However, detailed examination of these medical papers revealed that in vitrostudies, human clinical and epidemiological studies, molecular assays and methods, and genomic studies contributed most to their development. No chimpanzee study made an essential contribution, or, in most cases, a significant contribution of any kind, to the development of the medical method described. The approval of these experiments indicates a failure of the ethics committee system. The demonstrable lack of benefit of most chimpanzee experimentation and its profound animal welfare and bioethical costs indicate that a ban is warranted in those remaining countries - notably the United States - that continue to conduct it.

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UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

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#3 Good Health and Well-Being

Source: InCites

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Citation topics
1 Clinical & Life Sciences
1.117 Pharmacology & Toxicology
1.117.2161 Non-Animal Testing
Web Of Science research areas
Veterinary Sciences
ESI research areas
Plant & Animal Science
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