Animal research
Research using animals: an overview
Around half the diseases in the world have no treatment. Understanding how the body works and how diseases progress, and finding cures, vaccines or treatments, can take many years of painstaking work using a wide range of research techniques. There is overwhelming scientific consensus worldwide that some research using animals is still essential for medical progress.
Animal research in the UK is strictly regulated. For more details on the regulations governing research using animals, go to the regulations page (see link on left).
- Why is animal research necessary?
- Is it morally right to use animals for research?
- Aren’t animals too different from humans to tell us anything useful?
- What does research using animals actually involve?
- Why must primates be used?
- What is done to primates?
- How many primates does Oxford hold?
- What’s the difference between ‘total held’ and ‘on procedure’?
- Why has the overall number held gone down?
- You say primates account for under 0.5% of animals, so that means you have at least 16,000 animals in the Biomedical Sciences Building in total - is that right?
- Aren’t there alternative research methods?
- How have humans benefited from research using animals?
- We may have used animals in the past to develop medical treatments, but are they really needed in the 21st century?
- How will humans benefit in future?
