Human relevance
Chimpanzee experimentation
Knight A. The
poor contribution of chimpanzee experiments to biomedical progress. J
Appl Anim Welf Sci 2007; 10(4):
281-308.
http://www.leaonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/10888700701555501.
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Scientific poster (A0 size, 1.26 mb).
SHORT SUMMARY
Knight A. Chimpanzee experiments: questionable contributions to biomedical progress. Alternatives to Animal Testing & Experimentation 2008; 14 (Spl. Issue: Proc. 6th World Congress on Alternatives & Animal Use in the Life Sciences): 119-124. Download (535 kb).
Knight A. The
beginning of the end for chimpanzee experiments? Philosophy, Ethics and
Humanities in Medicine 2008; 3:16 (2 June 2008).
doi:10.1186/1747-5341-3-16.
http://www.peh-med.com/content/3/1/16, accessed 2 June 2008.
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Scientific poster (A3 size, 1.10 mb).
ABSTRACT J Appl Anim Welf Sci 2007
Biomedical research on
captive chimpanzees incurs substantial nonhuman animal welfare, ethical, and
financial costs that advocates claim result in 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 vitro studies, 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.
ABSTRACT
Philos, Ethics & Humanities in Med 2008
The advanced sensory, psychological and social abilities of chimpanzees confer upon them a profound ability to suffer when born into unnatural captive environments, or captured from the wild – as many older research chimpanzees once were – and when subsequently subjected to confinement, social disruption, and involuntary participation in potentially harmful biomedical research. Justifications for such research depend primarily on the important contributions advocates claim it has made toward medical advancements. However, a recent large-scale systematic review indicates that invasive chimpanzee experiments rarely provide benefits in excess of their profound animal welfare, bioethical and financial costs. The approval of large numbers of these experiments – particularly within the US – therefore indicates a failure of the ethics committee system. By 2008, legislative or policy bans or restrictions on invasive great ape experimentation existed in seven European countries, Japan, Australia and New Zealand. In continuing to conduct such experiments on chimpanzees and other great apes, the US was almost completely isolated internationally. In 2007, however, the US National Institutes of Health National Center for Research Resources implemented a permanent funding moratorium on chimpanzee breeding, which is expected to result in a major decline in laboratory chimpanzee numbers over the next 30 years, as most are retired or die. Additionally, in 2008, The Great Ape Protection Act was introduced to Congress. The bill proposed to end invasive research and testing on an estimated 1,200 chimpanzees confined within US laboratories, and, for approximately 600 federally-owned, to ensure their permanent retirement to sanctuaries. These events have created an unprecedented opportunity for US legislators, researchers, and others, to consider a global ban on invasive chimpanzee research. Such a ban would not only uphold the best interests of chimpanzees, and other research fields presently deprived of funding, but would also increase the compliance of US animal researchers with internationally-accepted animal welfare and bioethical standards. It could even result in the first global moratorium on invasive research, for any non-human species, unless conducted in the best interests of the individual or species.