Many people may assume that animal testing exists because it works — that it’s a necessary step to protect human health. But when you look at the evidence, a different picture emerges.
Despite decades of reliance on animal experiments, they remain poor indicators of what will happen in people. Around 9 in 10 new drugs that pass animal tests still fail in human trials window.jumpTo($el.getAttribute('href')))" data-no-smooth data-refid="1" data-refnumber="1">[1] — usually because the animal data didn’t predict human responses.
And the cost of these failures is profound — both for the animals and for the human patients left waiting for real medical breakthroughs.
Here are 3 reasons why animal testing fails and how you can help shape a future where science protects people without harming animals.








