For decades, animals have been subjected to painful and traumatising experiments in the name of science — despite clear evidence that animal testing consistently fails to predict what will happen in humans.
Across most areas of biomedical research, treatments that appear effective in animals frequently do not work in people. In fact, 90 – 95% of experimental drugs that pass animal tests fail in human trials. That’s because an animal’s biology, disease processes, and responses to drugs differ in important ways from our own. Animal experiments often cannot answer the very questions they are used to justify — how a disease develops in humans, or whether a treatment will be safe and effective for patients.
And the cost of these failures is profound — both for the animals and for the human patients left waiting for real medical breakthroughs.
The good news is, a quiet revolution is underway.
Around the world, scientists are developing powerful new tools that study human biology directly — without harming animals. Known collectively as New Approach Methodologies (NAMs), these innovations are already reshaping drug development, chemical safety testing and disease research.
They offer something profoundly important: better science that doesn’t come at the cost of animal suffering.
Here are five of the most promising technologies leading this shift.








