Animal research Flashcards

1
Q

three main ethical approaches

A

virtue, deontology and util

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2
Q

virtue ethics

A

right action will e chosen by a virtuous agent

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3
Q

virtue ethicist

A

aristotle, philipa foot

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4
Q

deontology

A

rule based

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5
Q

deontologist

A

kant

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6
Q

utilitarianism

A

greatest good for the greatest number

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7
Q

utilitarianism ethicists

A

JS Mill J Bentham P Singer

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8
Q

which is main school of thought around animal testing

A

util

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9
Q

peter singer

A

animal liberation- ‘greatest good for the greatest number’- but believes animals have equal rights to humans

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10
Q

when was the Animal scientific procedures act created and amended

A

1986/ 2013

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11
Q

pain suffering and harm are measured by

A

Lower Veterinary Scale

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12
Q

protected species are

A

all vertebrates other than human and cephalopods

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13
Q

animal scientific procedures act 1986 promotes the

A

3Rs

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14
Q

three tier licensing system administered through

A

the home office

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15
Q

three tier licensing system

A

1) establishment licence
2) project licence
3) personal licence

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16
Q

1) establishment licence

A

housing animals on premises and allows researchers to use animals in their work

17
Q

2) project licence

A

applied for by researchers- last for 5 years- researchers set out what they are going to do- a focus on harm-benefit analysis- have to justify use by outlining benefits as well as potential harms- takes around 6-12 months to gain

18
Q

3) personal licence

A

mandatory training programs- ten apply for personal licence- allowing them to carry out defined procedures- throughout life researchers will have ongoing assessments to make sure training is up to date.

19
Q

Home office inspectors- how many and how often do they come

A

24 and come every couple of months, sometimes unannounced

20
Q

Exeter university research

A
  • Looking at behaviour of basking sharks
  • Ecology and conservation
  • Animal behaviour
  • Biomedical- prevention and treatment of disease in humans and animals
21
Q

ethical review at UofE

A

Animal welfare and ethical review board is responsible for:

  • Reviewing all project license application and amendments
  • Disseminating guidance and compliance requirements
  • Promoting the 3Rs
  • Promoting the highest standards of care and welfare- ‘culture of care’
  • Oversight of all research involving animals
  • Membership: expertise and lay perspective
22
Q

what is a key focus

A

husbandry- how the animals are kept and caed for

23
Q

what is key

A

transparency

24
Q

the 3 Rs stand for

A

Replacement
Reduction
Refinement

25
Q

3Rs created by

A

Russel and Birch

26
Q

Replacement

A

Methods which avoid the use of animals, or replace animals defines as protected, in an experiment where they would have otherwise been used e.g. replacing mice with wax moth lavvy

27
Q

Reduction

A

Methods that reduce the number of animals used in a an experiment e.g. encouraging researchers to share data

28
Q

Refinement

A

Refinement
Methods that minimise any pain, suffering, distress or lasting harm that may be experienced by the animals e.g. husbandry important here