Heart 4 Animals

January 12, 2008

Compassionate Shopping - knowing that your products do not unnecessarily harm animals

AAVS recently assumed responsibility over leading the Coalition for Consumer Information on Cosmetics (CCIC), which manages the Leaping Bunny Program. Formed in 1996 by AAVS and six other animal advocacy organizations, the CCIC works with companies to verify the elimination of all new animal testing from their products and promote the use of an international ‘leaping bunny’ product logo that is easily recognizable for consumers seeking trust-worthy, animal-friendly products.

AAVS only lists companies that have joined the Leaping Bunny Program in its Compassionate Shopping Guide, giving consumers confidence in the cruelty-free products they are buying. Request a free Guide! Or view and print our pocket-sized Compassionate Shopping Guide in Acrobat PDF format:

Product Testing on Animals
Every year, millions of animals, mostly rabbits, mice, and rats, are subject to tests that assess the safety of personal care and household products. However, there is no law that specifically requires that animals be used as human models to test personal care products such as soap, cosmetics, or deodorant and household products such as floor cleaner or laundry detergent, and neither the U.S. Food and Drug Administration or the Consumer Product Safety Commission require companies to use animal tests to prove that their ingredients and finished products are safe. Furthermore, reactions to the exposure of these products vary among species, making it difficult to extract data from animal tests and apply them to situations in which humans are exposed.

Additionally, there is no ethical justification for the use of animals in testing the effects of personal care and household items. The Draize eye irritancy test, for example, subjects animals, usually rabbits, to procedures where they are restrained and a test substance is placed into one of each animals’ eyes, with the opposite eye serving as the control. During the experiment, little veterinary care is given and the use of topical anesthetics is rare. The animals¹ eyes are evaluated for up to three weeks to gauge ocular changes, including damage to their eyelids, conjunctiva, iris, and cornea, and the animals are likely killed upon completion of the experiment. Other toxicity tests include the Draize skin irritancy test, which is similar to the Draize eye test, only done on shaved skin, and acute toxicity tests, also called the LD50 and LD100, which involve the poisoning of animals until half or all the test subjects die. While consumers do deserve safe products, animal tests such as these have never been subjected to rigorous scientific testing to assess their ability to predict human safety yet are readily accepted, having never been validated.

Be confident about your cruelty-free choices.
Look for the leaping bunny logo!

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