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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 5 page paper provides an overview of Heloisa Sabin's article Animal Research Saves Human Lives which discusses the use of animal research to create the polio vaccine that would save thousands of lives and help to eradicate polio in the developed world. This article discusses the issue of animal testing and the problems that researchers face in the midst of harsh criticisms of the use of animals in medical experimentation.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: MH11_MHAniExp.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
polio in the developed world. This article discusses the issue of animal testing and the problems that researchers face in the midst of harsh criticisms of the use of
animals in medical experimentation. Though the article presented repeatedly discusses the experimentation provided by Sabin, it does not outline a methodology, provide variables or discuss sampling populations in
any form. This example paper, then, will provide the student with an overview of how a study might have been conducted using a population of rats, what the variables
would be, and how the issues of validity and reliability would be applied to this study. If the student wants to pick another ARTICLE that outlines an actual study to
be reviewed, you can do this and request a revision of this paper that relates to the variables in the actual study. The testing of the polio
vaccine on animals required the use of control and subject populations and the introduction of the vaccine on live animal groups. In an experimental rat population, the introduction of
the oral polio vaccine in one population and the use of a placebo in the other population is one method for determining if notable benefits can be derived when both
populations are exposed to the polio. In order to create a true research experiment, the subjects would be numbered and the doses would also be numbered, and this double-blind
experiment would not allow the researchers to see which rats received the vaccine and which did not until after final data was collected. The independent variables in this case are
the introduction of either the polio vaccine or a placebo and the exposure to polio. The dependent variable is the outcomes, either the contracting of polio or testing free
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