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	<title>Symptom Advice .com &#187; medical testing on humans</title>
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		<title>Past medical testing on humans revealed &#8211; Lake County News-Sun</title>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 18 Mar 2011 02:34:06 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[Past medical testing on humans revealed &#098;&#121; MIKE STOBBE &#116;&#104;&#101; &#097;&#115;&#115;&#111;&#099;&#105;&#097;&#116;&#101;&#100; Press Feb 27, 2011 09:54PM E-Mail Print In &#116;&#104;&#105;&#115; June 25, 1945, picture, army doctors expose patients to malaria-carrying mosquitoes in &#116;&#104;&#101; malaria ward &#097;&#116; Stateville Penitentiary in Crest Hill, Ill. &#124; AP file photo Article Extras ATLANTA — Shocking as &#105;&#116; may &#115;&#101;&#101;&#109;, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p></p><p> Past medical testing on humans revealed
<p> &#098;&#121; MIKE STOBBE &#116;&#104;&#101; &#097;&#115;&#115;&#111;&#099;&#105;&#097;&#116;&#101;&#100; Press Feb 27, 2011 09:54PM </p>
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<p>In &#116;&#104;&#105;&#115; June 25, 1945, picture, army doctors expose patients to malaria-carrying mosquitoes in &#116;&#104;&#101; malaria ward &#097;&#116; Stateville Penitentiary in Crest Hill, Ill. | AP file photo</p>
<p> Article Extras
<p>ATLANTA — Shocking as &#105;&#116; may &#115;&#101;&#101;&#109;, U.S. government doctors once thought &#105;&#116; was fine to experiment on disabled people and prison inmates. &#115;&#117;&#099;&#104; experiments included giving hepatitis to mental patients in Connecticut, squirting a pandemic flu virus &#117;&#112; &#116;&#104;&#101; noses &#111;&#102; prisoners in Maryland, and injecting cancer cells into chronically ill people &#097;&#116; a New York hospital.</p>
<p>Much &#111;&#102; &#116;&#104;&#105;&#115; horrific history is 40 to 80 years &#111;&#108;&#100;, but &#105;&#116; is &#116;&#104;&#101; backdrop for a meeting in Washington &#116;&#104;&#105;&#115; week &#098;&#121; a presidential bioethics commission. &#116;&#104;&#101; meeting was triggered &#098;&#121; &#116;&#104;&#101; government’s apology last fall for federal doctors infecting prisoners and mental patients in Guatemala with syphilis 65 years ago.</p>
<p>U.S. officials &#097;&#108;&#115;&#111; acknowledged there &#104;&#097;&#100; &#098;&#101;&#101;&#110; dozens &#111;&#102; similar experiments in &#116;&#104;&#101; United States — studies that &#111;&#102;&#116;&#101;&#110; involved making healthy people sick.</p>
<p>An exhaustive review &#098;&#121; &#116;&#104;&#101; &#097;&#115;&#115;&#111;&#099;&#105;&#097;&#116;&#101;&#100; Press &#111;&#102; medical journal reports and decades-old press clippings found &#109;&#111;&#114;&#101; &#116;&#104;&#097;&#110; 40 &#115;&#117;&#099;&#104; studies. &#097;&#116; best, these were a search for lifesaving treatments; &#097;&#116; &#119;&#111;&#114;&#115;&#116;, &#115;&#111;&#109;&#101; amounted to curiosity-satisfying experiments that hurt people but &#112;&#114;&#111;&#118;&#105;&#100;&#101;&#100; &#110;&#111; &#117;&#115;&#101;&#102;&#117;&#108; results.</p>
<p>Inevitably, they &#119;&#105;&#108;&#108; &#098;&#101; compared to &#116;&#104;&#101; well-known Tuskegee syphilis study. In that episode, U.S. health officials tracked 600 black men in Alabama &#119;&#104;&#111; already &#104;&#097;&#100; syphilis but didn’t &#103;&#105;&#118;&#101; &#116;&#104;&#101;&#109; adequate treatment even &#097;&#102;&#116;&#101;&#114; penicillin became &#097;&#118;&#097;&#105;&#108;&#097;&#098;&#108;&#101;.</p>
<p>These studies were worse in &#097;&#116; &#108;&#101;&#097;&#115;&#116; one respect — they violated &#116;&#104;&#101; concept &#111;&#102; “first &#100;&#111; &#110;&#111; harm,” a fundamental medical principle that stretches &#098;&#097;&#099;&#107; centuries.</p>
<p>“When you &#103;&#105;&#118;&#101; &#115;&#111;&#109;&#101;&#098;&#111;&#100;&#121; a disease — even &#098;&#121; &#116;&#104;&#101; standards &#111;&#102; &#116;&#104;&#101;&#105;&#114; time — you really cross &#116;&#104;&#101; key ethical norm &#111;&#102; &#116;&#104;&#101; profession,” &#115;&#097;&#105;&#100; Arthur Caplan, director &#111;&#102; &#116;&#104;&#101; University &#111;&#102; Pennsylvania’s Center for Bioethics.</p>
<p>Some &#111;&#102; these studies, mostly from &#116;&#104;&#101; 1940s to &#116;&#104;&#101; ‘60s, apparently were &#110;&#101;&#118;&#101;&#114; covered &#098;&#121; news media. &#111;&#116;&#104;&#101;&#114;&#115; were reported &#097;&#116; &#116;&#104;&#101; time, but &#116;&#104;&#101; focus was on &#116;&#104;&#101; promise &#111;&#102; enduring new cures, while glossing &#111;&#118;&#101;&#114; how test subjects were treated.</p>
<p>Attitudes about medical research were different &#116;&#104;&#101;&#110;. Infectious diseases &#107;&#105;&#108;&#108;&#101;&#100; &#109;&#097;&#110;&#121; &#109;&#111;&#114;&#101; people years ago, and doctors worked urgently to invent and test cures. &#109;&#097;&#110;&#121; prominent researchers felt &#105;&#116; was legitimate to experiment on people &#119;&#104;&#111; did &#110;&#111;&#116; &#104;&#097;&#118;&#101; &#102;&#117;&#108;&#108; rights in society — people &#108;&#105;&#107;&#101; prisoners, mental patients, poor blacks. &#105;&#116; was &#097;&#110; attitude in &#115;&#111;&#109;&#101; ways similar to that &#111;&#102; Nazi doctors experimenting on Jews.</p>
<p>“There was definitely a sense — that &#119;&#101; don’t &#104;&#097;&#118;&#101; today — that sacrifice for &#116;&#104;&#101; nation was important,” &#115;&#097;&#105;&#100; Laura Stark, a Wesleyan University assistant professor &#111;&#102; science in society, &#119;&#104;&#111; is writing a book about past federal medical experiments.</p>
<p>The AP review &#111;&#102; past research found:</p>
<p>— A federally funded study begun in 1942 injected experimental flu vaccine in male patients &#097;&#116; a state insane asylum in Ypsilanti, Mich., &#116;&#104;&#101;&#110; exposed &#116;&#104;&#101;&#109; to flu several months later. &#105;&#116; was co-authored &#098;&#121; Dr. Jonas Salk, &#119;&#104;&#111; a decade later would &#098;&#101;&#099;&#111;&#109;&#101; famous as inventor &#111;&#102; &#116;&#104;&#101; polio vaccine.</p>
<p>Some &#111;&#102; &#116;&#104;&#101; men weren’t able to &#100;&#101;&#115;&#099;&#114;&#105;&#098;&#101; &#116;&#104;&#101;&#105;&#114; symptoms, raising &#115;&#101;&#114;&#105;&#111;&#117;&#115; questions about how &#119;&#101;&#108;&#108; they understood what was &#098;&#101;&#105;&#110;&#103; done to &#116;&#104;&#101;&#109;. One newspaper account mentioned &#116;&#104;&#101; test subjects were “senile and debilitated.” &#116;&#104;&#101;&#110; &#105;&#116; quickly moved on to &#116;&#104;&#101; promising results.</p>
<p>— In federally funded studies in &#116;&#104;&#101; 1940s, noted researcher Dr. W. Paul Havens Jr. exposed men to hepatitis in a series &#111;&#102; experiments, including one using patients from mental institutions in Middletown and Norwich, Conn. Havens, a World Health Organization expert on viral diseases, was one &#111;&#102; &#116;&#104;&#101; first scientists to differentiate types &#111;&#102; hepatitis and &#116;&#104;&#101;&#105;&#114; &#099;&#097;&#117;&#115;&#101;&#115;.</p>
<p>A search &#111;&#102; &#118;&#097;&#114;&#105;&#111;&#117;&#115; news archives found &#110;&#111; mention &#111;&#102; &#116;&#104;&#101; mental patients study, &#119;&#104;&#105;&#099;&#104; &#109;&#097;&#100;&#101; &#101;&#105;&#103;&#104;&#116; healthy men ill but broke &#110;&#111; new ground in understanding &#116;&#104;&#101; disease.</p>
<p>— Researchers in &#116;&#104;&#101; mid-1940s studied &#116;&#104;&#101; transmission &#111;&#102; a deadly stomach bug &#098;&#121; having young men swallow unfiltered stool suspension. &#116;&#104;&#101; study was conducted &#097;&#116; &#116;&#104;&#101; New York State Vocational Institution, a reformatory prison in West Coxsackie. &#116;&#104;&#101; point was to &#115;&#101;&#101; how &#119;&#101;&#108;&#108; &#116;&#104;&#101; disease spread that way as compared to spraying &#116;&#104;&#101; germs and having test subjects breathe &#105;&#116;. Swallowing &#105;&#116; was a &#109;&#111;&#114;&#101; effective way to spread &#116;&#104;&#101; disease, &#116;&#104;&#101; researchers concluded. &#116;&#104;&#101; study doesn’t explain if &#116;&#104;&#101; men were rewarded for &#116;&#104;&#105;&#115; &#097;&#119;&#102;&#117;&#108; task.</p>
<p>— A University &#111;&#102; Minnesota study in &#116;&#104;&#101; late 1940s injected 11 public service employee volunteers with malaria, &#116;&#104;&#101;&#110; starved &#116;&#104;&#101;&#109; for five days. &#115;&#111;&#109;&#101; were &#097;&#108;&#115;&#111; subjected to hard labor, and &#116;&#104;&#111;&#115;&#101; men lost &#097;&#110; average &#111;&#102; 14 pounds. They were treated for malarial fevers with quinine sulfate. One &#111;&#102; &#116;&#104;&#101; authors was Ancel Keys, a noted dietary scientist &#119;&#104;&#111; developed K-rations for &#116;&#104;&#101; military and &#116;&#104;&#101; Mediterranean diet for &#116;&#104;&#101; public. But a search &#111;&#102; &#118;&#097;&#114;&#105;&#111;&#117;&#115; news archives found &#110;&#111; mention &#111;&#102; &#116;&#104;&#101; study.</p>
<p>— For a study in 1957, when &#116;&#104;&#101; Asian flu pandemic was spreading, federal researchers sprayed &#116;&#104;&#101; virus in &#116;&#104;&#101; noses &#111;&#102; 23 inmates &#097;&#116; Patuxent prison in Jessup, Md., to compare &#116;&#104;&#101;&#105;&#114; reactions to &#116;&#104;&#111;&#115;&#101; &#111;&#102; 32 virus-exposed inmates &#119;&#104;&#111; &#104;&#097;&#100; &#098;&#101;&#101;&#110; given a new vaccine.</p>
<p>— Government researchers in &#116;&#104;&#101; 1950s tried to infect about &#116;&#119;&#111; dozen volunteering prison inmates with gonorrhea using &#116;&#119;&#111; different methods in &#097;&#110; experiment &#097;&#116; a federal penitentiary in Atlanta. &#116;&#104;&#101; bacteria was pumped &#100;&#105;&#114;&#101;&#099;&#116;&#108;&#121; into &#116;&#104;&#101; urinary tract through &#116;&#104;&#101; penis, &#097;&#099;&#099;&#111;&#114;&#100;&#105;&#110;&#103; to &#116;&#104;&#101;&#105;&#114; paper.</p>
<p>The men quickly developed &#116;&#104;&#101; disease, but &#116;&#104;&#101; researchers noted &#116;&#104;&#105;&#115; method wasn’t comparable to how men &#110;&#111;&#114;&#109;&#097;&#108;&#108;&#121; &#103;&#111;&#116; infected — &#098;&#121; having sex with &#097;&#110; infected partner. &#116;&#104;&#101; men were later treated with antibiotics. &#116;&#104;&#101; study was published in &#116;&#104;&#101; Journal &#111;&#102; &#116;&#104;&#101; American Medical Association, but there was &#110;&#111; mention &#111;&#102; &#105;&#116; in &#118;&#097;&#114;&#105;&#111;&#117;&#115; news archives.</p>
<p>Though people in &#116;&#104;&#101; studies were &#117;&#115;&#117;&#097;&#108;&#108;&#121; &#100;&#101;&#115;&#099;&#114;&#105;&#098;&#101;&#100; as volunteers, historians and ethicists &#104;&#097;&#118;&#101; questioned how &#119;&#101;&#108;&#108; these people understood what was to &#098;&#101; done to &#116;&#104;&#101;&#109; and why, &#111;&#114; &#119;&#104;&#101;&#116;&#104;&#101;&#114; they were coerced.</p>
<p>Prisoners &#104;&#097;&#118;&#101; long &#098;&#101;&#101;&#110; victimized for &#116;&#104;&#101; sake &#111;&#102; science. In 1915, &#116;&#104;&#101; U.S. government’s Dr. Joseph Goldberger — today remembered as a public health hero — recruited Mississippi inmates to go on special rations to prove his theory that &#116;&#104;&#101; painful illness pellagra was caused &#098;&#121; a dietary deficiency. (The men were offered pardons for &#116;&#104;&#101;&#105;&#114; participation.)</p>
<p>But studies using prisoners were uncommon in &#116;&#104;&#101; first &#102;&#101;&#119; decades &#111;&#102; &#116;&#104;&#101; 20th century, and &#117;&#115;&#117;&#097;&#108;&#108;&#121; performed &#098;&#121; researchers considered eccentric even &#098;&#121; &#116;&#104;&#101; standards &#111;&#102; &#116;&#104;&#101; day. One was Dr. L.L. Stanley, resident physician &#097;&#116; San Quentin prison in California, &#119;&#104;&#111; &#097;&#114;&#111;&#117;&#110;&#100; 1920 attempted to treat older, “devitalized men” &#098;&#121; implanting in &#116;&#104;&#101;&#109; testicles from livestock and from recently executed convicts.</p>
<p>Newspapers wrote about Stanley’s experiments, but &#116;&#104;&#101; lack &#111;&#102; outrage is striking.</p>
<p>“Enter San Quentin penitentiary in &#116;&#104;&#101; role &#111;&#102; &#116;&#104;&#101; Fountain &#111;&#102; Youth — &#097;&#110; institution &#119;&#104;&#101;&#114;&#101; &#116;&#104;&#101; years &#097;&#114;&#101; &#109;&#097;&#100;&#101; to roll &#098;&#097;&#099;&#107; for men &#111;&#102; failing mentality and vitality and &#119;&#104;&#101;&#114;&#101; &#116;&#104;&#101; spring is restored to &#116;&#104;&#101; step, wit to &#116;&#104;&#101; brain, vigor to &#116;&#104;&#101; muscles and ambition to &#116;&#104;&#101; spirit. All &#116;&#104;&#105;&#115; &#104;&#097;&#115; &#098;&#101;&#101;&#110; done, is &#098;&#101;&#105;&#110;&#103; done &#8230; &#098;&#121; a surgeon with a scalpel,” &#098;&#101;&#103;&#097;&#110; one rosy report published in November 1919 in &#116;&#104;&#101; Washington Post.</p>
<p>Around &#116;&#104;&#101; time &#111;&#102; World War II, prisoners were enlisted to &#104;&#101;&#108;&#112; &#116;&#104;&#101; war effort &#098;&#121; taking &#112;&#097;&#114;&#116; in studies that &#099;&#111;&#117;&#108;&#100; &#104;&#101;&#108;&#112; &#116;&#104;&#101; troops. For &#101;&#120;&#097;&#109;&#112;&#108;&#101;, a series &#111;&#102; malaria studies &#097;&#116; Stateville Penitentiary in Illinois and &#116;&#119;&#111; other prisons was designed to test antimalarial drugs that &#099;&#111;&#117;&#108;&#100; &#104;&#101;&#108;&#112; soldiers fighting in &#116;&#104;&#101; Pacific.</p>
<p>It was &#097;&#116; about &#116;&#104;&#105;&#115; time that prosecution &#111;&#102; Nazi doctors in 1947 led to &#116;&#104;&#101; “Nuremberg Code,” a set &#111;&#102; international rules to protect human test subjects. &#109;&#097;&#110;&#121; U.S. doctors essentially &#105;&#103;&#110;&#111;&#114;&#101;&#100; &#116;&#104;&#101;&#109;, arguing that they applied to Nazi atrocities — &#110;&#111;&#116; to American medicine.</p>
<p>The late 1940s and 1950s saw &#104;&#117;&#103;&#101; growth in &#116;&#104;&#101; U.S. pharmaceutical and health care industries, accompanied &#098;&#121; a boom in prisoner experiments funded &#098;&#121; &#098;&#111;&#116;&#104; &#116;&#104;&#101; government and corporations. &#098;&#121; &#116;&#104;&#101; 1960s, &#097;&#116; &#108;&#101;&#097;&#115;&#116; half &#116;&#104;&#101; states allowed prisoners to &#098;&#101; &#117;&#115;&#101;&#100; as medical guinea pigs.</p>
<p>But &#116;&#119;&#111; studies in &#116;&#104;&#101; 1960s proved to &#098;&#101; turning points in &#116;&#104;&#101; public’s attitude toward &#116;&#104;&#101; way test subjects were treated.</p>
<p>The first &#099;&#097;&#109;&#101; to light in 1963. Researchers injected cancer cells into 19 &#111;&#108;&#100; and debilitated patients &#097;&#116; a Jewish Chronic Disease Hospital in &#116;&#104;&#101; New York borough &#111;&#102; Brooklyn to &#115;&#101;&#101; if &#116;&#104;&#101;&#105;&#114; bodies would reject &#116;&#104;&#101;&#109;.</p>
<p>The hospital director &#115;&#097;&#105;&#100; &#116;&#104;&#101; patients were &#110;&#111;&#116; &#116;&#111;&#108;&#100; they were &#098;&#101;&#105;&#110;&#103; injected with cancer cells because there was &#110;&#111; &#110;&#101;&#101;&#100; — &#116;&#104;&#101; cells were deemed harmless. But &#116;&#104;&#101; experiment upset a lawyer named William Hyman &#119;&#104;&#111; sat on &#116;&#104;&#101; hospital’s board &#111;&#102; directors. &#116;&#104;&#101; state investigated, and &#116;&#104;&#101; hospital ultimately &#115;&#097;&#105;&#100; any &#115;&#117;&#099;&#104; experiments would require &#116;&#104;&#101; patient’s written consent.</p>
<p>At nearby Staten Island, from 1963 to 1966, a controversial medical study was conducted &#097;&#116; &#116;&#104;&#101; Willowbrook State School for children with mental retardation. &#116;&#104;&#101; children were intentionally given hepatitis orally and &#098;&#121; injection to &#115;&#101;&#101; if they &#099;&#111;&#117;&#108;&#100; &#116;&#104;&#101;&#110; &#098;&#101; cured with gamma globulin.</p>
<p>Those &#116;&#119;&#111; studies — along with &#116;&#104;&#101; Tuskegee experiment revealed in 1972 — proved to &#098;&#101; a “holy trinity” that sparked extensive and critical media coverage and public disgust, &#115;&#097;&#105;&#100; Susan Reverby, &#116;&#104;&#101; Wellesley College historian &#119;&#104;&#111; first discovered records &#111;&#102; &#116;&#104;&#101; syphilis study in Guatemala.</p></p>
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