Often times the animals die. If not, then they suffer deformities, pain, have diseases inflicted on them, lose senses, torture, sickness.
Yes, all drugs contain chemicals. Drugs are defined as substances that have physiological effects when introduced into the body, and these effects are typically due to the chemicals within the drug interacting with the body's biological systems.
These animals suffer alot from the side effects caused from the drug. (Poor animals) Some even have effects on them like blindness, deaf, infections of disease etc. EVEN DEATH but a slow painful death.
One argument against is that it involves experimenting with the health and safety of human beings. An argument for is that although effects of drugs on animals may be similar to their effects on humans, some effects may be specific to human beings only. Another is that testing drugs on human beings may result in unexpected negative results for the subjects.
No, it should be illegal.
Vivisection is another name for animal testing.
Every year about 1 billion dollars is spent on animal testing even though there is cheaper and more effective ways. 92% of drugs that pass animal testing fail clinical trials. Animals and humans dont have the same effects.
Almost all animal rights activists are adamantly against testing drugs on animals.
Because testing some things (like new drugs whose effects aren't fully known) on humans can be at best unethical and at worst criminal.
they are dosed with chemicals to see what will happen. they have chemicals put on their skins to see if they will irritate, they are given diseases and then treated with experimental drugs to see what happens to them, the list is endless.
After testing and approval, then they can be used on humans.
They put horrible ointment in their eyes, test drugs on them(wich may kill them) and don't forget, the animals are getting hurt for us, because the 'tester people' are testing medicines and drugs on the animals, to see if they are safe for us humans.
Synthetic drugs, such as designer drugs or research chemicals, are created to imitate the effects of controlled substances. These substances are often developed with slight chemical modifications to avoid legal restrictions while still producing similar effects to the controlled drugs they are designed to mimic. However, synthetic drugs can be more dangerous due to variations in potency and potential unknown side effects.