| Robots Could Replace Adorable Animals in Toxicity Tests |
| Written by Hank Green | ||
| Friday, 15 February 2008 | ||
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According to the BBC, scientists are working on ways to replace live animal testing of everything from cosmetics to pesticides with "high speed, automated robots" and "live cells grown in a laboratory."
Sounds preferable to the traditional systems. Of course, it wouldn't be a full approximation of the marvelous beauty and intricate systems of a real-live cute little bunny rabbit. So for pharmaceutical and broader carcinogen and system-wide effects, I'm afraid they'd still go under the knife. Nevertheless, this would certainly be a step in the right direction.
Comments
(4)
good
written by Luke , February 16, 2008
it's about time they did something like this
It's A Start
written by Brian Green , February 16, 2008
While I'm obviously simplifying matters, it does seem logical that we'll be able to move away from animal studies to those conducted by machines or through grown human tissues in petri dishes.
Nice blog
written by Onebucks , February 17, 2008
Nice blog you have here. Keep up the good work!
...
written by Virgil , February 18, 2008
So for pharmaceutical and broader carcinogen and system-wide effects, I'm afraid they'd still go under the knife.
And therein lies the crunch. This is nothing new really. All it means is that high-throughput drug screening can be done by robots, to see the effects of a drug on a dish of cells. However, as soon as the system delivers a "hit" and it's time to see if the drug actually does anything in a more realistic setting (i.e. inside a live organism), then the bunny massacre will begin. It might save a few animal lives, but please don't even begin to pretend that this will ever replace good old fashioned animal tests. All it will actually replace is human jobs in the laboratory! Give it a few years of lots of people dying because drugs were rushed to market on the basis of inadequate testing, and we'll be right back at square one. | ||
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