Thursday, November 14, 2024

ANIMALS 101 – ARE THE PRODUCTS YOU USE TESTED ON ANIMALS?

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ARE YOU MAKING ETHICAL CHOICES WHEN IT COMES TO ANIMALS AND THE PRODUCTS YOU USE?

Most people don’t really give any thought to animals when they buy products for themselves, whether clothes, beauty or cleaning products, medicines, etc., but when you work in animal welfare, it most likely becomes second nature to make ethical choices, especially when it involves animals. Cruelty is not only physical abuse and unknowingly you might be cruel to animals by supporting certain practices, products, or industries. Today we will focus on the medical and beauty industry with regards to animal testing.

24 April is World Day for Laboratory Animals, an “international day of commemoration” for animals in laboratories.

Animals used for research include (in decreasing order) mice, rats, birds, rabbits, guinea pigs, hamsters, farm animals (including pigs and sheep), dogs, primates (including monkeys and chimpanzees), and cats. Frogs and fish are also widely used. These are however not the only ones and some are sadly not protected under animal welfare Acts.  Animals can’t consent to this and their lives are given for a “cause” they can’t comprehend. Do you think that is ethical and acceptable?

Charles Magel shares that when you ask the experimenters why they experiment on animals, the answer is, ‘Because the animals are like us.’ Ask the experimenters why it is morally okay to experiment on animals, and the answer is, ‘Because the animals are not like us.”

There are modern, reliable, effective, repeatable, and available tools, yet they are not being exclusively used. Why? Dr. James Gallagher gives part of the answer: “Animal studies are done for legal reasons, not scientific ones. The predictive value of such studies is meaningless to men”.  Legislation and potential litigation are to blame, along with vested interests.

animal testing
Image by Beauty without Cruelty (South Africa)

This article is a reprint from 21 September 2022.

MEDICAL RESEARCH AND ANIMAL TESTING

Every year millions of animals suffer and die for nothing because animal-based experiments are misleading and retard medical progress. Did you know that when it comes to the statistics for medical research, the number of animals who suffer and die in laboratories increases to over 190 million a year, and likely more by now? It is heartbreaking if you can even begin to imagine the suffering, kept in cages their whole life, being blinded, blistered, and poisoned.

Here are just a few examples of how animal-based testing retard medical progress or how animals respond differently to humans as shared by Beauty without Cruelty SA:

  • The introduction of blood transfusion was delayed for over 200 years because of misleading results of animal experiments.
  • Corneal transplants were delayed nearly 90 years by misleading animal tests.
  • Morphine drugs are a depressant in rats, dogs, hamsters, and other species, but produce tremors and convulsions at comparable doses in mice and cats. Morphine sedates people and dogs but causes maniacal excitement in cats and mice.
  • Tests on animals have led to around 100 drugs being thought potentially useful for stroke; not one has proved effective in humans.
  • Penicillin kills guinea pigs but can be a lifesaver for humans.
  • Aspirin and Streptomycin can produce allergic reactions in lab animals.
  • Paracetamol kills cats.
  • Did you know that more than 90% of experimental drugs that are safe and effective in animals fail in human clinical trials as they are too dangerous?

Animal studies do not predict with any certainty what will happen in humans! Dr. Sabin Albert also said that giving cancer to laboratory animals has not and will not help us to understand the disease or to treat those persons suffering from it.

Three major conditions explain why animal experimentation, regardless of the disease category studied, fails to reliably inform human health:

  1. The effects of the laboratory environment and other variables on study outcomes.
  2. Disparities between animal models of disease and human diseases.
  3. Species differences in physiology and genetics.

I agree with Beauty without Cruelty when they say that you don’t need to be a balaclava-wearing animal rights activist to question the value of animal studies in this area of medical research.  Animal testing is INHUMANE, UNNECESSARY & INEFFECTIVE! There are safe, modern, effective, accurate, reliable, and repeatable methods available that require no living beings. What’s missing is the will. Why are governments not legislating an end to all animal use and insisting that all future research and testing options must be modern, as these are the ones that benefit humans in the short, medium, and long term?

animal testing
Image by Beauty Without Cruelty

We also support the development of the 4 R’s guiding principles, namely Replacement, Reduction, Refinement, and Responsibility when using animals for scientific purposes. The more we push for better welfare standards, higher prioritization of animal life and further questioning the scientific validity of animal experiments, the more we can make a difference.

Read part three of our animal cruelty awareness series this month with a focus on the cruel industries and practices you might, unknowingly be supporting.

ARE YOU USING CRUELTY-FREE BEAUTY PRODUCTS?

Animal testing for cosmetics will never have a place, will never be necessary nor valid, and should always be condemned.

laboratory animals
Image by Beauty without Cruelty (South Africa)

The term “cruelty-free” is unregulated. This means that brands aren’t breaking the law by calling themselves cruelty-free, even if they test on animals. Companies lie through omission, intention, or misdirection. Many beauty brands try to mislead us this way, even some sold by your friends and family! It is not what they claim, but what they can prove!

The CRUELTY-FREE 5 QUESTIONS cover the stages at which animal testing can occur. If a brand can confirm that they pass these stages without animal testing, we can consider them really cruelty-free. Brands that are truly transparent and cruelty-free will respond with clear answers to these questions. If they skip questions or follow up with a short animal testing policy or smart marketing slogans, watch out because you might not be dealing with a cruelty-free company.

Contact the brand and ask them the CRUELTY-FREE 5 QUESTIONS.

  • Does your brand test on animals, for either finished products or ingredients?
  • Do your suppliers test on animals? How do you ensure this?
  • Do any third parties test on animals on your behalf?
  • Do you test on animals where required by law?
  • In which countries are your products sold?

One way you can distinguish these types of products from others is the rabbit logo on the product.  It does not cost anything to be able to use the rabbit logo so when the brand can answer “no” to the 5 questions, with proof, they may be allowed to use the logos. So, the only reason I can think of why a brand would not do it is because they are either testing on animals or they don’t care enough. PLEASE NOTE there are different rabbit logos and not all rabbit logos mean the same. Some add a bunny that just says “We love animals”. That doesn’t mean they are cruelty-free. I trust the Beauty without Cruelty logo. 

Bunny logo
Logo of Beauty without Cruelty (South Africa)

The day you make this decision to change the brands you love or products that work for you to cruelty-free brands, it can be quite overwhelming and it certainly was for me! There are just so many products that are tested on animals worldwide. Be kind and use the humane guide endorsed by Beauty without Cruelty (South Africa). They have already done the hard work and this comprehensive list of beauty products, not tested on animals can and should be your go-to. Keep in mind that there are companies listed that don’t use the logo which also means the guide is essential. You can also contact BWC via social media to confirm.

If your brand is not listed there, you can contact your brand and ask the 5 cruelty-free questions or encourage them to apply for the use of the logo if they claim they are cruelty-free. I first asked a brand if they are cruelty-free and got a smart marketing slogan reply back. I then asked the 5 questions with no reply, so I changed my brand. For another brand, I asked about the rabbit logo they do use which I know doesn’t mean they are cruelty-free, and got no reply. 

Next, you can start by changing out your beauty products one by one as your current ones are finished.  I have used Oh so Heavenly, The Good Stuff, Be Bare Life (shampoo and conditioner bars), and the W-beauty brand from Woolworths. (None are paid endorsements). 

Next, you can move to more environmentally friendly packaging products. Also, think about the clothes you wear. Do you dress to kill, or kill to dress?  I now choose not to buy any more fur, feathers (including feather duvets), or leather products. I will share more on wearing it kind next week!

Cruelty-free cosmetics
Image by Beauty Without Cruelty

CHINA – As of May 2021, according to the Chinese National Medical Products Administration (NMPA), imported cosmetics products that fall into the ‘general’ category will no longer require mandatory animal testing to enter the Chinese beauty market. This means that shampoo, body wash, lotions, and make-up no longer require mandatory animal testing for products sold IN China. While animal use remains standard for hair dyes, perming products, blemish pigment-removing products, sunscreens, and others, including cosmetics claiming new efficacy, this is still a significant step forward. There is no mandatory animal use requirement for products manufactured in China for export purposes.

Watch this 4-minute animated short film on #SaveRalph. It is directed by Spencer Susser and stars Zac Efron, Ricky Gervais, and others.

The least we can do is remember the animals, be thankful, and acknowledge them for any breakthroughs in medical sciences they have helped towards, but continue to protest all unjust harm to them and for animal-free research to be our future.  Make ethical choices when you buy products and please help create awareness for the many millions of animals who suffer and die in labs around the world for useless research every year!  

Next week we will look at your clothing choice!

WHEN YOU KNOW BETTER, DO BETTER!