When Is Something an Alternative? A General Account Applied to Animal-Free Alternatives to Animal Research

Publication date

2024

Authors

Kramer, KoenISNI 0000000492177996

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Document Type

Article

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Abstract

The first “R” from animal research ethics prescribes the replacement of animal experiments with animal-free alternatives. However, the question of when an animal-free method qualifies as an alternative to animal experiments remains unresolved. Drawing lessons from another debate in which the word “alternative” is central, the ethical debate on alternatives to germline genome editing, this paper develops a general account of when something qualifies as an alternative to something. It proposes three ethically significant conditions that technique, method, or approach X must meet to qualify as an alternative to Y: (1) X must address the same problem as Y, under an appropriate description of that problem; (2) X must have a reasonable chance of success, compared to Y, in solving the problem; and (3) X must not be ethically unacceptable as a solution. If X meets all these conditions, its relative advantages and disadvantages determine whether it is preferable, indifferent, or dispreferable as an alternative to Y. This account is then applied to the question of whether animal-free research methods qualify as alternatives to animal research. Doing so breaks down the debate around this question into more focused (ethical and other) issues and illustrates the potential of the account.

Keywords

3Rs, alternatives to animal research, germline genome editing, preimplantation genetic diagnosis, Health(social science), Issues, ethics and legal aspects, Health Policy

Citation

Kramer, K 2024, 'When Is Something an Alternative? A General Account Applied to Animal-Free Alternatives to Animal Research', Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics, vol. 33, no. 1, pp. 89-101. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0963180123000300