Nuffield Council on Bioethics, The ethics of research involving animals, 2006.
The structure and focus of the Report
The focus of this Report is on ethical issues raised by research involving animals. After a more detailed introduction (Chapter 1) and a description of the past and present context of the debate (Chapter 2), we present an outline of the ethical issues in Chapter 3. This chapter does not seek to explain or defend individual or collective positions of members of the Working Party but rather aims to provide the reader with an overview of the kind of questions that are posed by animal research. Since the degree to which animals involved in research experience pain, suffering and distress is central to the debate, we explore philosophical and practical aspects of assessing these states in animals (Chapter 4). Having provided this background we then describe a range of different scientific uses of animals which includes basic research to understand how animals develop and function (Chapter 5), the use of animals for the study of human disease (Chapter 6), genetic modification of animals in the study of disease (Chapter 7), the development of medicines and vaccines by the pharmaceutical industry (Chapter 8) and toxicological testing of potentially hazardous compounds for animals, humans or the environment (Chapter 9). We consider the scope and potential of methods that seek to replace, reduce or refine animal research In Chapters 11 and 12. After an outline of the regulatory context (Chapter 13) we resume the ethical discussion in Chapter 14 and present the views of the Working Party, inviting readers to compare their own judgements in the light of the Report with that of the Working Party. Our recommendations are presented in Chapter 15.
Dostupné zde.