| AMRC charities plan their research carefully to ensure
it is relevant, well thought out and avoids duplication. They fund a variety of
alternative research methods, including test-tube and cell culture experiments, computer
simulations, clinical trials and epidemiological surveys. Yet funding medical research
with animals remains essential for understanding, treating and preventing a range of
health problems. These include: accidents, all types of cancer, childhood illnesses such
as asthma and diabetes, hereditary diseases such as cystic fibrosis, diseases of modern
life like heart disease, degenerative disorders such as Alzheimers disease and infectious
diseases, especially in poorer countries. In the UK animal
experiments are strictly regulated by law - the Animals (Scientific Procedures) Act 1986 -
as well as further guidance from the Home Office. These regulations are the tightest in
the world. AMRC charities support these laws and require scientists they fund to comply
with them.
The Association of Medical Research Charities has over 100 member
charities whose combined expenditure on medical research in the UK was £520 million in
1999/00. They are a major source of funding for research in all areas of medicine in the
UK. Not all AMRC charities currently fund research involving animals, but all of them
recognise the important role it has played, and its vital future contribution to
understanding, preventing and treating human diseases.
DebRA UK is a member of the Association of Medical Research
Charities (AMRC) and endorses and abides by this statement of good practice. |