Nope. 15 is not "the number" I asked for. That's the point that's being missed here. I could care less about the regulation. I'm looking for information on whether flying above 15,000, or even 12,500 without oxygen could cause a passenger long term harm. And preferably, what altitude should be considered a max for a couple hours of exposure.
If I have a passenger that doesn't want to use oxygen when I'm at 17,000 feet for two hours, I'm not going to use the regs to convince them otherwise, because the reg doesn't say he has to use it.
If I have to decide for a passenger (like my dog) whether they use it, I'd like to know more than I do now to make a good decision. There's been very little information presented here to help answer those basic questions. The best I can get out of the thread is "monitor them" or "give them oxygen". Neither answers the questions asked.
There is an altitude where long term harm will occur. Somewhere around 50,000 feet, you'll be pretty long term harmed without oxygen even if there only a very short time. I'd like to get something better than "somewhere between 0 and 50,000 MSL it can cause harm.