Animals in research are a perfectly just and humane way to further scientific research for human beings. If it takes one animal to save hundreds of humans then why is there a problem? Ground-breaking work on the genetic regulation of organ development and programmed cell death has won three researchers the 2002 Nobel Prize in Medicine. The research led to a new understanding of diseases ranging from cancer to strokes to AIDS (American for Medical Progress: New Scientist 2002). Scientist are not intentionally hurting animals for fun they are doing this to further medical understandings and save human lives. Animal experiments have been vital to the discovery and development of many advances in physiology and medicine. Given the statement "Animal experiments are still crucial to the investigation and development of many medical treatments," in a poll done by the Research defense society 92% of the people polled agreed and 3% did not. While animal life is very important, human life is more valuable, and that medical progress is good, supporters of animal-based researchers believe that such experimentation is essential before biomedical procedures and drugs are used in human beings. Opponents generally say that an animal life is equal to a human life. …