Pathobiololgical Sciences, School of Veterinary Medicine, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI, United States of America.
Medical History and Bioethics, School of Medicine and Public Health, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2022 Aug 8;17(8):e0272306. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0272306. eCollection 2022.
Acceptance of animal research by the public depends on several characteristics of the specific experimental study. In particular, acceptance decreases as potential animal pain or distress increases. Our objective in this study was to quantify the magnitude of pain/distress that university undergraduate students and faculty would find to be justifiable in animal research, and to see how that justifiability varied according to the purpose of the research, or the species to which the animal belonged. We also evaluate how demographic characteristics of respondents may be associated with their opinions about justifiability. To accomplish this goal, we developed and administered a survey to students and faculty at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. Our survey employed Likert-style questions that asked them to designate the level of animal pain or distress that they felt was justifiable for each of the following six purposes-animal disease, human disease, basic research, human medicine, chemical testing, or cosmetic testing. These questions were asked about five different species of animals including monkeys, dogs/cats, pig/sheep, rats/mice, or small fish. We used the data to establish a purpose-specific pain/distress scale, a species-specific pain/distress scale, and a composite pain/distress scale that, for each respondent, averaged the extent of justifiable pain/distress across all purposes and species. For purpose, students were more likely to choose higher levels of pain for animal disease research, followed by human disease, basic research, human medicine, chemical testing, and cosmetic testing. Faculty were more likely to choose the same level of pain for the first four purposes, followed by lower levels of pain for chemical and cosmetic testing. For species, students were more likely to choose higher levels of pain for small fish and rats/mice (tied), pigs/sheep and monkeys (tied), than for dogs/cats. For faculty, order from least to most justifiable pain/distress was small fish, rats/mice, pigs/sheep, then dogs/cats and monkeys (the latter two tied). Interestingly, exploratory factor analysis of the pain/distress scales indicated that when it comes to justifying higher levels of pain and distress, respondents identified two distinct categories of purposes, chemical and cosmetic testing, for which respondents were less likely to justify higher levels of pain or distress as compared to other purposes; and two distinct categories of species, small fish and rats/mice, for which respondents were more likely to justify higher levels of pain/distress than other species. We found that the spread of acceptance of animal research was much smaller when survey questions included pain/distress compared to when only purpose or species were part of the question. Demographically, women, vegetarians/vegans, and respondents with no experience in animal research justified less animal pain/distress than their counterparts. Not surprisingly, a lower level of support for animal research in general was correlated with lower justifiability of pain/distress. Based on these findings, we discuss the role of animal pain/distress in regulatory considerations underlying decisions about whether to approve specific animal uses, and suggest ways to strengthen the ethical review and public acceptance of animal research.
公众对动物研究的接受程度取决于具体实验研究的几个特征。特别是,随着潜在动物疼痛或痛苦的增加,接受度会降低。我们的研究目的是量化大学生和教师认为在动物研究中合理的疼痛/痛苦程度,并观察这种合理性如何根据研究目的或动物所属物种而有所不同。我们还评估了受访者的人口统计学特征如何与其对合理性的看法相关。为了实现这一目标,我们开发并向威斯康星大学麦迪逊分校的学生和教师进行了调查。我们的调查采用了李克特式问题,要求他们为以下六个目的中的每一个指定他们认为合理的动物疼痛或痛苦程度:动物疾病、人类疾病、基础研究、人类医学、化学测试或化妆品测试。这些问题是关于包括猴子、狗/猫、猪/羊、老鼠/老鼠或小鱼在内的五种不同物种的动物提出的。我们使用这些数据建立了一个特定于目的的疼痛/痛苦量表、一个特定于物种的疼痛/痛苦量表和一个综合疼痛/痛苦量表,对于每个受访者,根据所有目的和物种,平均合理的疼痛/痛苦程度。对于目的,学生更有可能为动物疾病研究选择更高水平的疼痛,其次是人类疾病、基础研究、人类医学、化学测试和化妆品测试。与前四种目的相比,教师更有可能选择相同水平的疼痛,然后是化学和化妆品测试。对于物种,学生更有可能为小鱼和老鼠/老鼠(并列)选择更高水平的疼痛,而不是狗/猫。对于教师来说,从最不合理到最合理的疼痛/痛苦程度依次是小鱼、老鼠/老鼠、猪/羊,然后是狗/猫和猴子(后两者并列)。有趣的是,对疼痛/痛苦量表的探索性因子分析表明,当涉及到为更高水平的疼痛和痛苦辩护时,受访者确定了两类不同的目的,即化学和化妆品测试,与其他目的相比,受访者不太可能为更高水平的疼痛或痛苦辩护;以及两类不同的物种,小鱼和老鼠/老鼠,与其他物种相比,受访者更有可能为更高水平的疼痛/痛苦辩护。我们发现,与仅包括目的或物种的问题相比,当调查问题包括疼痛/痛苦时,对动物研究的接受范围要小得多。在人口统计学方面,女性、素食主义者/素食主义者以及没有动物研究经验的受访者比他们的同行更不愿意为动物带来痛苦。毫不奇怪,对动物研究的总体支持度较低与对疼痛/痛苦的可接受性较低相关。基于这些发现,我们讨论了动物疼痛/痛苦在决定是否批准特定动物用途的监管考虑中的作用,并提出了加强动物研究伦理审查和公众接受度的方法。