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		<title>Medical experiments backdrop for ethics meeting&#160;
 &#8211; News &#8211; 
Charleston Daily Mail &#8211; West Virginia News and Sports -</title>
		<link>http://symptomadvice.com/medical-experiments-backdrop-for-ethics-meeting-news-charleston-daily-mail-west-virginia-news-and-sports/</link>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 22 Mar 2011 10:34:16 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Symptom Advice</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[gonorrhea symptoms]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[medical experiments]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[Monday February 28, 2011 Medical experiments backdrop &#102;&#111;&#114; ethics meeting Review reveals &#116;&#104;&#097;&#116; US doctors experimented &#111;&#110; prisoners, mentally ill Advertiser ATLANTA &#8211; Shocking as it may seem, U.S. government doctors once &#116;&#104;&#111;&#117;&#103;&#104;&#116; it &#119;&#097;&#115; fine to experiment &#111;&#110; disabled people &#097;&#110;&#100; prison inmates. &#115;&#117;&#099;&#104; experiments included giving hepatitis to mental patients &#105;&#110; Connecticut, squirting [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p></p><p><img src="http://symptomadvice.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/03/1300790056-64.gif%3Fw%3D500%26h%3D342" style="clear:both;clear:both;margin:0 15px 15px 0;width:500px" />Monday February 28, 2011 Medical experiments backdrop &#102;&#111;&#114; ethics meeting Review reveals &#116;&#104;&#097;&#116; US doctors experimented &#111;&#110; prisoners, mentally ill Advertiser
<p>ATLANTA &#8211; Shocking as it may seem, U.S. government doctors once &#116;&#104;&#111;&#117;&#103;&#104;&#116; it &#119;&#097;&#115; fine to experiment &#111;&#110; disabled people &#097;&#110;&#100; prison inmates. &#115;&#117;&#099;&#104; experiments included giving hepatitis to mental patients &#105;&#110; Connecticut, squirting &#097; pandemic flu virus up the noses of prisoners &#105;&#110; Maryland, &#097;&#110;&#100; injecting cancer cells &#105;&#110;&#116;&#111; chronically ill people &#097;&#116; &#097; New York hospital.</p>
<p>Much of &#116;&#104;&#105;&#115; horrific history &#105;&#115; 40 to 80 years old, but it &#105;&#115; the backdrop &#102;&#111;&#114; &#097; meeting &#105;&#110; Washington &#116;&#104;&#105;&#115; week &#098;&#121; &#097; presidential bioethics commission. The meeting &#119;&#097;&#115; triggered &#098;&#121; the government&#039;s apology last fall &#102;&#111;&#114; federal doctors infecting prisoners &#097;&#110;&#100; mental patients &#105;&#110; Guatemala with syphilis 65 years &#097;&#103;&#111;.</p>
<p>U.S. officials also acknowledged there &#104;&#097;&#100; &#098;&#101;&#101;&#110; dozens of similar experiments &#105;&#110; the United States &#8211; studies &#116;&#104;&#097;&#116; often involved making healthy people sick.</p>
<p>An exhaustive review &#098;&#121; The &#097;&#115;&#115;&#111;&#099;&#105;&#097;&#116;&#101;&#100; Press of medical journal reports &#097;&#110;&#100; decades-old press clippings found &#109;&#111;&#114;&#101; &#116;&#104;&#097;&#110; 40 &#115;&#117;&#099;&#104; studies. &#097;&#116; &#098;&#101;&#115;&#116;, &#116;&#104;&#101;&#115;&#101; were &#097; search &#102;&#111;&#114; lifesaving treatments; &#097;&#116; worst, some amounted to curiosity-satisfying experiments &#116;&#104;&#097;&#116; 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; be compared to the well-known Tuskegee syphilis study. &#105;&#110; &#116;&#104;&#097;&#116; episode, U.S. health officials tracked 600 black men &#105;&#110; Alabama who already &#104;&#097;&#100; syphilis but didn&#039;t give them adequate treatment &#101;&#118;&#101;&#110; &#097;&#102;&#116;&#101;&#114; penicillin &#098;&#101;&#099;&#097;&#109;&#101; available.</p>
<p>These studies were worse &#105;&#110; &#097;&#116; &#108;&#101;&#097;&#115;&#116; one respect &#8211; they violated the concept of &quot;first do &#110;&#111; harm,&quot; &#097; fundamental medical principle &#116;&#104;&#097;&#116; stretches &#098;&#097;&#099;&#107; centuries.</p>
<p>&quot;When you give somebody &#097; disease &#8211; &#101;&#118;&#101;&#110; &#098;&#121; the standards of their time &#8211; you really cross the key ethical norm of the profession,&quot; said Arthur Caplan, director of the University of Pennsylvania&#039;s Center &#102;&#111;&#114; Bioethics.</p>
<p>Some of &#116;&#104;&#101;&#115;&#101; studies, mostly &#102;&#114;&#111;&#109; the 1940s to the &#039;60s, apparently were &#110;&#101;&#118;&#101;&#114; covered &#098;&#121; news media. Others were reported &#097;&#116; the time, but the focus &#119;&#097;&#115; &#111;&#110; the promise of enduring new cures, &#119;&#104;&#105;&#108;&#101; glossing over how test subjects were treated.</p>
<p>Attitudes &#097;&#098;&#111;&#117;&#116; medical research were different &#116;&#104;&#101;&#110;. Infectious diseases killed many &#109;&#111;&#114;&#101; people years &#097;&#103;&#111;, &#097;&#110;&#100; doctors worked urgently to invent &#097;&#110;&#100; test cures. Many prominent researchers felt it &#119;&#097;&#115; legitimate to experiment &#111;&#110; people who did &#110;&#111;&#116; &#104;&#097;&#118;&#101; full rights &#105;&#110; society &#8211; people &#108;&#105;&#107;&#101; prisoners, mental patients, poor blacks. It &#119;&#097;&#115; an attitude &#105;&#110; some ways similar to &#116;&#104;&#097;&#116; of Nazi doctors experimenting &#111;&#110; Jews.</p>
<p>&quot;There &#119;&#097;&#115; definitely &#097; sense &#8211; &#116;&#104;&#097;&#116; &#119;&#101; don&#039;t &#104;&#097;&#118;&#101; today &#8211; &#116;&#104;&#097;&#116; sacrifice &#102;&#111;&#114; the nation &#119;&#097;&#115; important,&quot; said Laura Stark, &#097; Wesleyan University assistant professor of science &#105;&#110; society, who &#105;&#115; writing &#097; book &#097;&#098;&#111;&#117;&#116; &#112;&#097;&#115;&#116; federal medical experiments.</p>
<p>The AP review of &#112;&#097;&#115;&#116; research found:</p>
<p>
<li>A federally funded study begun &#105;&#110; 1942 injected experimental flu vaccine &#105;&#110; male patients &#097;&#116; &#097; state insane asylum &#105;&#110; Ypsilanti, Mich., &#116;&#104;&#101;&#110; exposed them to flu several months &#108;&#097;&#116;&#101;&#114;. It &#119;&#097;&#115; co-authored &#098;&#121; Dr. Jonas Salk, who &#097; decade &#108;&#097;&#116;&#101;&#114; &#119;&#111;&#117;&#108;&#100; become famous as inventor of the polio vaccine.</li>
</p>
<p>Some of the men weren&#039;t &#097;&#098;&#108;&#101; to &#100;&#101;&#115;&#099;&#114;&#105;&#098;&#101; their symptoms, raising serious questions &#097;&#098;&#111;&#117;&#116; how well they understood what &#119;&#097;&#115; being done to them. One newspaper account mentioned the test subjects were &quot;senile &#097;&#110;&#100; debilitated.&quot; &#116;&#104;&#101;&#110; it quickly &#109;&#111;&#118;&#101;&#100; &#111;&#110; to the promising results.</p>
<p>
<li>In federally funded studies &#105;&#110; the 1940s, noted researcher Dr. W. Paul Havens Jr. exposed men to hepatitis &#105;&#110; &#097; series of experiments, including one using patients &#102;&#114;&#111;&#109; mental institutions &#105;&#110; Middletown &#097;&#110;&#100; Norwich, Conn. Havens, &#097; World Health Organization expert &#111;&#110; viral diseases, &#119;&#097;&#115; one of the first scientists to differentiate types of hepatitis &#097;&#110;&#100; their &#099;&#097;&#117;&#115;&#101;&#115;.</li>
</p>
<p>A search of &#118;&#097;&#114;&#105;&#111;&#117;&#115; news archives found &#110;&#111; mention of the mental patients study, which &#109;&#097;&#100;&#101; &#101;&#105;&#103;&#104;&#116; healthy men ill but &#098;&#114;&#111;&#107;&#101; &#110;&#111; new ground &#105;&#110; understanding the disease.</p>
<p>
<li>Researchers &#105;&#110; the mid-1940s studied the transmission of &#097; deadly stomach bug &#098;&#121; &#104;&#097;&#118;&#105;&#110;&#103; young men swallow unfiltered stool suspension. The study &#119;&#097;&#115; conducted &#097;&#116; the New York State Vocational Institution, &#097; reformatory prison &#105;&#110; West Coxsackie. The point &#119;&#097;&#115; to &#115;&#101;&#101; how well the disease spread &#116;&#104;&#097;&#116; way as compared to spraying the germs &#097;&#110;&#100; &#104;&#097;&#118;&#105;&#110;&#103; test subjects breathe it. Swallowing it &#119;&#097;&#115; &#097; &#109;&#111;&#114;&#101; effective way to spread the disease, the researchers concluded. The study doesn&#039;t explain if the men were rewarded &#102;&#111;&#114; &#116;&#104;&#105;&#115; &#097;&#119;&#102;&#117;&#108; task.</li>
</p>
<p>
<li>A University of Minnesota study &#105;&#110; the late 1940s injected 11 public service employee volunteers with malaria, &#116;&#104;&#101;&#110; starved them &#102;&#111;&#114; five days. Some were also subjected to hard labor, &#097;&#110;&#100; those men lost an average of 14 pounds. They were treated &#102;&#111;&#114; malarial fevers with quinine sulfate. One of the authors &#119;&#097;&#115; Ancel Keys, &#097; noted dietary scientist who developed K-rations &#102;&#111;&#114; the military &#097;&#110;&#100; the Mediterranean diet &#102;&#111;&#114; the public. But &#097; search of &#118;&#097;&#114;&#105;&#111;&#117;&#115; news archives found &#110;&#111; mention of the study.</li>
</p>
<p>
<li>For &#097; study &#105;&#110; 1957, when the Asian flu pandemic &#119;&#097;&#115; spreading, federal researchers sprayed the virus &#105;&#110; the noses of 23 inmates &#097;&#116; Patuxent prison &#105;&#110; Jessup, Md., to compare their reactions to those of 32 virus-exposed inmates who &#104;&#097;&#100; &#098;&#101;&#101;&#110; &#103;&#105;&#118;&#101;&#110; &#097; new vaccine.</li>
</p>
<p>
<li>Government researchers &#105;&#110; the 1950s &#116;&#114;&#105;&#101;&#100; to infect &#097;&#098;&#111;&#117;&#116; two dozen volunteering prison inmates with gonorrhea using two different methods &#105;&#110; an experiment &#097;&#116; &#097; federal penitentiary &#105;&#110; Atlanta. The bacteria &#119;&#097;&#115; pumped directly &#105;&#110;&#116;&#111; the urinary tract &#116;&#104;&#114;&#111;&#117;&#103;&#104; the penis, according to their paper.</li>
</p>
<p>The men quickly developed the disease, but the researchers noted &#116;&#104;&#105;&#115; method wasn&#039;t comparable to how men &#110;&#111;&#114;&#109;&#097;&#108;&#108;&#121; got infected &#8211; &#098;&#121; &#104;&#097;&#118;&#105;&#110;&#103; sex with an infected partner. The men were &#108;&#097;&#116;&#101;&#114; treated with antibiotics. The study &#119;&#097;&#115; published &#105;&#110; the Journal of the American Medical Association, but there &#119;&#097;&#115; &#110;&#111; mention of it &#105;&#110; &#118;&#097;&#114;&#105;&#111;&#117;&#115; news archives.</p>
<p>Though people &#105;&#110; the studies were &#117;&#115;&#117;&#097;&#108;&#108;&#121; described as volunteers, historians &#097;&#110;&#100; ethicists &#104;&#097;&#118;&#101; &#113;&#117;&#101;&#115;&#116;&#105;&#111;&#110;&#101;&#100; how well &#116;&#104;&#101;&#115;&#101; people understood what &#119;&#097;&#115; to be done to them &#097;&#110;&#100; &#119;&#104;&#121;, &#111;&#114; whether they were coerced.</p>
<p>Prisoners &#104;&#097;&#118;&#101; long &#098;&#101;&#101;&#110; victimized &#102;&#111;&#114; the sake of science. &#105;&#110; 1915, the U.S. government&#039;s Dr. Joseph Goldberger &#8211; today remembered as &#097; public health hero &#8211; recruited Mississippi inmates to go &#111;&#110; special rations to prove his theory &#116;&#104;&#097;&#116; the painful illness pellagra &#119;&#097;&#115; caused &#098;&#121; &#097; dietary deficiency. (The men were offered pardons &#102;&#111;&#114; their participation.)</p>
<p>But studies using prisoners were uncommon &#105;&#110; the first few decades of the 20th century, &#097;&#110;&#100; &#117;&#115;&#117;&#097;&#108;&#108;&#121; performed &#098;&#121; researchers considered eccentric &#101;&#118;&#101;&#110; &#098;&#121; the standards of the day. One &#119;&#097;&#115; Dr. L.L. Stanley, resident physician &#097;&#116; San Quentin prison &#105;&#110; California, who around 1920 attempted to treat older, &quot;devitalized men&quot; &#098;&#121; implanting &#105;&#110; them testicles &#102;&#114;&#111;&#109; livestock &#097;&#110;&#100; &#102;&#114;&#111;&#109; &#114;&#101;&#099;&#101;&#110;&#116;&#108;&#121; executed convicts.</p>
<p>Newspapers wrote &#097;&#098;&#111;&#117;&#116; Stanley&#039;s experiments, but the lack of outrage &#105;&#115; striking.</p>
<p>&quot;Enter San Quentin penitentiary &#105;&#110; the role of the Fountain of Youth &#8211; an institution where the years are &#109;&#097;&#100;&#101; to roll &#098;&#097;&#099;&#107; &#102;&#111;&#114; men of failing mentality &#097;&#110;&#100; vitality &#097;&#110;&#100; where the spring &#105;&#115; restored to the step, wit to the brain, vigor to the muscles &#097;&#110;&#100; ambition to the spirit. &#097;&#108;&#108; &#116;&#104;&#105;&#115; has &#098;&#101;&#101;&#110; done, &#105;&#115; being done . . . &#098;&#121; &#097; surgeon with &#097; scalpel,&quot; began one rosy report published &#105;&#110; November 1919 &#105;&#110; The Washington Post.</p>
<p>Around the time of World War II, prisoners were enlisted to &#104;&#101;&#108;&#112; the war effort &#098;&#121; &#116;&#097;&#107;&#105;&#110;&#103; &#112;&#097;&#114;&#116; &#105;&#110; studies &#116;&#104;&#097;&#116; &#099;&#111;&#117;&#108;&#100; &#104;&#101;&#108;&#112; the troops. &#102;&#111;&#114; &#101;&#120;&#097;&#109;&#112;&#108;&#101;, &#097; series of malaria studies &#097;&#116; Stateville Penitentiary &#105;&#110; Illinois &#097;&#110;&#100; two &#111;&#116;&#104;&#101;&#114; prisons &#119;&#097;&#115; designed to test antimalarial drugs &#116;&#104;&#097;&#116; &#099;&#111;&#117;&#108;&#100; &#104;&#101;&#108;&#112; soldiers fighting &#105;&#110; the Pacific.</p>
<p>It &#119;&#097;&#115; &#097;&#116; &#097;&#098;&#111;&#117;&#116; &#116;&#104;&#105;&#115; time &#116;&#104;&#097;&#116; prosecution of Nazi doctors &#105;&#110; 1947 led to the &quot;Nuremberg Code,&quot; &#097; set of international rules to protect human test subjects. Many U.S. doctors essentially &#105;&#103;&#110;&#111;&#114;&#101;&#100; them, arguing &#116;&#104;&#097;&#116; they applied to Nazi atrocities &#8211; &#110;&#111;&#116; to American medicine.</p>
<p>The late 1940s &#097;&#110;&#100; 1950s saw huge growth &#105;&#110; the U.S. pharmaceutical &#097;&#110;&#100; health care industries, accompanied &#098;&#121; &#097; boom &#105;&#110; prisoner experiments funded &#098;&#121; both the government &#097;&#110;&#100; corporations. &#098;&#121; the 1960s, &#097;&#116; &#108;&#101;&#097;&#115;&#116; half the states allowed prisoners to be &#117;&#115;&#101;&#100; as medical guinea pigs.</p>
<p>But two studies &#105;&#110; the 1960s proved to be turning points &#105;&#110; the public&#039;s attitude &#116;&#111;&#119;&#097;&#114;&#100; the way test subjects were treated.</p>
<p>ATLANTA &#8211; Shocking as it may seem, U.S. government doctors once &#116;&#104;&#111;&#117;&#103;&#104;&#116; it &#119;&#097;&#115; fine to experiment &#111;&#110; disabled people &#097;&#110;&#100; prison inmates. &#115;&#117;&#099;&#104; experiments included giving hepatitis to mental patients &#105;&#110; Connecticut, squirting &#097; pandemic flu virus up the noses of prisoners &#105;&#110; Maryland, &#097;&#110;&#100; injecting cancer cells &#105;&#110;&#116;&#111; chronically ill people &#097;&#116; &#097; New York hospital.</p>
<p>Much of &#116;&#104;&#105;&#115; horrific history &#105;&#115; 40 to 80 years old, but it &#105;&#115; the backdrop &#102;&#111;&#114; &#097; meeting &#105;&#110; Washington &#116;&#104;&#105;&#115; week &#098;&#121; &#097; presidential bioethics commission. The meeting &#119;&#097;&#115; triggered &#098;&#121; the government&#039;s apology last fall &#102;&#111;&#114; federal doctors infecting prisoners &#097;&#110;&#100; mental patients &#105;&#110; Guatemala with syphilis 65 years &#097;&#103;&#111;.</p>
<p>U.S. officials also acknowledged there &#104;&#097;&#100; &#098;&#101;&#101;&#110; dozens of similar experiments &#105;&#110; the United States &#8211; studies &#116;&#104;&#097;&#116; often involved making healthy people sick.</p>
<p>An exhaustive review &#098;&#121; The &#097;&#115;&#115;&#111;&#099;&#105;&#097;&#116;&#101;&#100; Press of medical journal reports &#097;&#110;&#100; decades-old press clippings found &#109;&#111;&#114;&#101; &#116;&#104;&#097;&#110; 40 &#115;&#117;&#099;&#104; studies. &#097;&#116; &#098;&#101;&#115;&#116;, &#116;&#104;&#101;&#115;&#101; were &#097; search &#102;&#111;&#114; lifesaving treatments; &#097;&#116; worst, some amounted to curiosity-satisfying experiments &#116;&#104;&#097;&#116; 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; be compared to the well-known Tuskegee syphilis study. &#105;&#110; &#116;&#104;&#097;&#116; episode, U.S. health officials tracked 600 black men &#105;&#110; Alabama who already &#104;&#097;&#100; syphilis but didn&#039;t give them adequate treatment &#101;&#118;&#101;&#110; &#097;&#102;&#116;&#101;&#114; penicillin &#098;&#101;&#099;&#097;&#109;&#101; available.</p>
<p>These studies were worse &#105;&#110; &#097;&#116; &#108;&#101;&#097;&#115;&#116; one respect &#8211; they violated the concept of &quot;first do &#110;&#111; harm,&quot; &#097; fundamental medical principle &#116;&#104;&#097;&#116; stretches &#098;&#097;&#099;&#107; centuries.</p>
<p>&quot;When you give somebody &#097; disease &#8211; &#101;&#118;&#101;&#110; &#098;&#121; the standards of their time &#8211; you really cross the key ethical norm of the profession,&quot; said Arthur Caplan, director of the University of Pennsylvania&#039;s Center &#102;&#111;&#114; Bioethics.</p>
<p>Some of &#116;&#104;&#101;&#115;&#101; studies, mostly &#102;&#114;&#111;&#109; the 1940s to the &#039;60s, apparently were &#110;&#101;&#118;&#101;&#114; covered &#098;&#121; news media. Others were reported &#097;&#116; the time, but the focus &#119;&#097;&#115; &#111;&#110; the promise of enduring new cures, &#119;&#104;&#105;&#108;&#101; glossing over how test subjects were treated.</p>
<p>Attitudes &#097;&#098;&#111;&#117;&#116; medical research were different &#116;&#104;&#101;&#110;. Infectious diseases killed many &#109;&#111;&#114;&#101; people years &#097;&#103;&#111;, &#097;&#110;&#100; doctors worked urgently to invent &#097;&#110;&#100; test cures. Many prominent researchers felt it &#119;&#097;&#115; legitimate to experiment &#111;&#110; people who did &#110;&#111;&#116; &#104;&#097;&#118;&#101; full rights &#105;&#110; society &#8211; people &#108;&#105;&#107;&#101; prisoners, mental patients, poor blacks. It &#119;&#097;&#115; an attitude &#105;&#110; some ways similar to &#116;&#104;&#097;&#116; of Nazi doctors experimenting &#111;&#110; Jews.</p>
<p>&quot;There &#119;&#097;&#115; definitely &#097; sense &#8211; &#116;&#104;&#097;&#116; &#119;&#101; don&#039;t &#104;&#097;&#118;&#101; today &#8211; &#116;&#104;&#097;&#116; sacrifice &#102;&#111;&#114; the nation &#119;&#097;&#115; important,&quot; said Laura Stark, &#097; Wesleyan University assistant professor of science &#105;&#110; society, who &#105;&#115; writing &#097; book &#097;&#098;&#111;&#117;&#116; &#112;&#097;&#115;&#116; federal medical experiments.</p>
<p>The AP review of &#112;&#097;&#115;&#116; research found:</p>
<p>
<li>A federally funded study begun &#105;&#110; 1942 injected experimental flu vaccine &#105;&#110; male patients &#097;&#116; &#097; state insane asylum &#105;&#110; Ypsilanti, Mich., &#116;&#104;&#101;&#110; exposed them to flu several months &#108;&#097;&#116;&#101;&#114;. It &#119;&#097;&#115; co-authored &#098;&#121; Dr. Jonas Salk, who &#097; decade &#108;&#097;&#116;&#101;&#114; &#119;&#111;&#117;&#108;&#100; become famous as inventor of the polio vaccine.</li>
</p>
<p>Some of the men weren&#039;t &#097;&#098;&#108;&#101; to &#100;&#101;&#115;&#099;&#114;&#105;&#098;&#101; their symptoms, raising serious questions &#097;&#098;&#111;&#117;&#116; how well they understood what &#119;&#097;&#115; being done to them. One newspaper account mentioned the test subjects were &quot;senile &#097;&#110;&#100; debilitated.&quot; &#116;&#104;&#101;&#110; it quickly &#109;&#111;&#118;&#101;&#100; &#111;&#110; to the promising results.</p>
<p>
<li>In federally funded studies &#105;&#110; the 1940s, noted researcher Dr. W. Paul Havens Jr. exposed men to hepatitis &#105;&#110; &#097; series of experiments, including one using patients &#102;&#114;&#111;&#109; mental institutions &#105;&#110; Middletown &#097;&#110;&#100; Norwich, Conn. Havens, &#097; World Health Organization expert &#111;&#110; viral diseases, &#119;&#097;&#115; one of the first scientists to differentiate types of hepatitis &#097;&#110;&#100; their &#099;&#097;&#117;&#115;&#101;&#115;.</li>
</p>
<p>A search of &#118;&#097;&#114;&#105;&#111;&#117;&#115; news archives found &#110;&#111; mention of the mental patients study, which &#109;&#097;&#100;&#101; &#101;&#105;&#103;&#104;&#116; healthy men ill but &#098;&#114;&#111;&#107;&#101; &#110;&#111; new ground &#105;&#110; understanding the disease.</p>
<p>
<li>Researchers &#105;&#110; the mid-1940s studied the transmission of &#097; deadly stomach bug &#098;&#121; &#104;&#097;&#118;&#105;&#110;&#103; young men swallow unfiltered stool suspension. The study &#119;&#097;&#115; conducted &#097;&#116; the New York State Vocational Institution, &#097; reformatory prison &#105;&#110; West Coxsackie. The point &#119;&#097;&#115; to &#115;&#101;&#101; how well the disease spread &#116;&#104;&#097;&#116; way as compared to spraying the germs &#097;&#110;&#100; &#104;&#097;&#118;&#105;&#110;&#103; test subjects breathe it. Swallowing it &#119;&#097;&#115; &#097; &#109;&#111;&#114;&#101; effective way to spread the disease, the researchers concluded. The study doesn&#039;t explain if the men were rewarded &#102;&#111;&#114; &#116;&#104;&#105;&#115; &#097;&#119;&#102;&#117;&#108; task.</li>
</p>
<p>
<li>A University of Minnesota study &#105;&#110; the late 1940s injected 11 public service employee volunteers with malaria, &#116;&#104;&#101;&#110; starved them &#102;&#111;&#114; five days. Some were also subjected to hard labor, &#097;&#110;&#100; those men lost an average of 14 pounds. They were treated &#102;&#111;&#114; malarial fevers with quinine sulfate. One of the authors &#119;&#097;&#115; Ancel Keys, &#097; noted dietary scientist who developed K-rations &#102;&#111;&#114; the military &#097;&#110;&#100; the Mediterranean diet &#102;&#111;&#114; the public. But &#097; search of &#118;&#097;&#114;&#105;&#111;&#117;&#115; news archives found &#110;&#111; mention of the study.</li>
</p>
<p>
<li>For &#097; study &#105;&#110; 1957, when the Asian flu pandemic &#119;&#097;&#115; spreading, federal researchers sprayed the virus &#105;&#110; the noses of 23 inmates &#097;&#116; Patuxent prison &#105;&#110; Jessup, Md., to compare their reactions to those of 32 virus-exposed inmates who &#104;&#097;&#100; &#098;&#101;&#101;&#110; &#103;&#105;&#118;&#101;&#110; &#097; new vaccine.</li>
</p>
<p>
<li>Government researchers &#105;&#110; the 1950s &#116;&#114;&#105;&#101;&#100; to infect &#097;&#098;&#111;&#117;&#116; two dozen volunteering prison inmates with gonorrhea using two different methods &#105;&#110; an experiment &#097;&#116; &#097; federal penitentiary &#105;&#110; Atlanta. The bacteria &#119;&#097;&#115; pumped directly &#105;&#110;&#116;&#111; the urinary tract &#116;&#104;&#114;&#111;&#117;&#103;&#104; the penis, according to their paper.</li>
</p>
<p>The men quickly developed the disease, but the researchers noted &#116;&#104;&#105;&#115; method wasn&#039;t comparable to how men &#110;&#111;&#114;&#109;&#097;&#108;&#108;&#121; got infected &#8211; &#098;&#121; &#104;&#097;&#118;&#105;&#110;&#103; sex with an infected partner. The men were &#108;&#097;&#116;&#101;&#114; treated with antibiotics. The study &#119;&#097;&#115; published &#105;&#110; the Journal of the American Medical Association, but there &#119;&#097;&#115; &#110;&#111; mention of it &#105;&#110; &#118;&#097;&#114;&#105;&#111;&#117;&#115; news archives.</p>
<p>Though people &#105;&#110; the studies were &#117;&#115;&#117;&#097;&#108;&#108;&#121; described as volunteers, historians &#097;&#110;&#100; ethicists &#104;&#097;&#118;&#101; &#113;&#117;&#101;&#115;&#116;&#105;&#111;&#110;&#101;&#100; how well &#116;&#104;&#101;&#115;&#101; people understood what &#119;&#097;&#115; to be done to them &#097;&#110;&#100; &#119;&#104;&#121;, &#111;&#114; whether they were coerced.</p>
<p>Prisoners &#104;&#097;&#118;&#101; long &#098;&#101;&#101;&#110; victimized &#102;&#111;&#114; the sake of science. &#105;&#110; 1915, the U.S. government&#039;s Dr. Joseph Goldberger &#8211; today remembered as &#097; public health hero &#8211; recruited Mississippi inmates to go &#111;&#110; special rations to prove his theory &#116;&#104;&#097;&#116; the painful illness pellagra &#119;&#097;&#115; caused &#098;&#121; &#097; dietary deficiency. (The men were offered pardons &#102;&#111;&#114; their participation.)</p>
<p>But studies using prisoners were uncommon &#105;&#110; the first few decades of the 20th century, &#097;&#110;&#100; &#117;&#115;&#117;&#097;&#108;&#108;&#121; performed &#098;&#121; researchers considered eccentric &#101;&#118;&#101;&#110; &#098;&#121; the standards of the day. One &#119;&#097;&#115; Dr. L.L. Stanley, resident physician &#097;&#116; San Quentin prison &#105;&#110; California, who around 1920 attempted to treat older, &quot;devitalized men&quot; &#098;&#121; implanting &#105;&#110; them testicles &#102;&#114;&#111;&#109; livestock &#097;&#110;&#100; &#102;&#114;&#111;&#109; &#114;&#101;&#099;&#101;&#110;&#116;&#108;&#121; executed convicts.</p>
<p>Newspapers wrote &#097;&#098;&#111;&#117;&#116; Stanley&#039;s experiments, but the lack of outrage &#105;&#115; striking.</p>
<p>&quot;Enter San Quentin penitentiary &#105;&#110; the role of the Fountain of Youth &#8211; an institution where the years are &#109;&#097;&#100;&#101; to roll &#098;&#097;&#099;&#107; &#102;&#111;&#114; men of failing mentality &#097;&#110;&#100; vitality &#097;&#110;&#100; where the spring &#105;&#115; restored to the step, wit to the brain, vigor to the muscles &#097;&#110;&#100; ambition to the spirit. &#097;&#108;&#108; &#116;&#104;&#105;&#115; has &#098;&#101;&#101;&#110; done, &#105;&#115; being done . . . &#098;&#121; &#097; surgeon with &#097; scalpel,&quot; began one rosy report published &#105;&#110; November 1919 &#105;&#110; The Washington Post.</p>
<p>Around the time of World War II, prisoners were enlisted to &#104;&#101;&#108;&#112; the war effort &#098;&#121; &#116;&#097;&#107;&#105;&#110;&#103; &#112;&#097;&#114;&#116; &#105;&#110; studies &#116;&#104;&#097;&#116; &#099;&#111;&#117;&#108;&#100; &#104;&#101;&#108;&#112; the troops. &#102;&#111;&#114; &#101;&#120;&#097;&#109;&#112;&#108;&#101;, &#097; series of malaria studies &#097;&#116; Stateville Penitentiary &#105;&#110; Illinois &#097;&#110;&#100; two &#111;&#116;&#104;&#101;&#114; prisons &#119;&#097;&#115; designed to test antimalarial drugs &#116;&#104;&#097;&#116; &#099;&#111;&#117;&#108;&#100; &#104;&#101;&#108;&#112; soldiers fighting &#105;&#110; the Pacific.</p>
<p>It &#119;&#097;&#115; &#097;&#116; &#097;&#098;&#111;&#117;&#116; &#116;&#104;&#105;&#115; time &#116;&#104;&#097;&#116; prosecution of Nazi doctors &#105;&#110; 1947 led to the &quot;Nuremberg Code,&quot; &#097; set of international rules to protect human test subjects. Many U.S. doctors essentially &#105;&#103;&#110;&#111;&#114;&#101;&#100; them, arguing &#116;&#104;&#097;&#116; they applied to Nazi atrocities &#8211; &#110;&#111;&#116; to American medicine.</p>
<p>The late 1940s &#097;&#110;&#100; 1950s saw huge growth &#105;&#110; the U.S. pharmaceutical &#097;&#110;&#100; health care industries, accompanied &#098;&#121; &#097; boom &#105;&#110; prisoner experiments funded &#098;&#121; both the government &#097;&#110;&#100; corporations. &#098;&#121; the 1960s, &#097;&#116; &#108;&#101;&#097;&#115;&#116; half the states allowed prisoners to be &#117;&#115;&#101;&#100; as medical guinea pigs.</p>
<p>But two studies &#105;&#110; the 1960s proved to be turning points &#105;&#110; the public&#039;s attitude &#116;&#111;&#119;&#097;&#114;&#100; the way test subjects were treated.</p>
<p>The first &#099;&#097;&#109;&#101; to light &#105;&#110; 1963. Researchers injected cancer cells &#105;&#110;&#116;&#111; 19 old &#097;&#110;&#100; debilitated patients &#097;&#116; &#097; Jewish Chronic Disease Hospital &#105;&#110; the New York borough of Brooklyn to &#115;&#101;&#101; if their bodies &#119;&#111;&#117;&#108;&#100; reject them.</p>
<p>The hospital director said the patients were &#110;&#111;&#116; told they were being injected with cancer cells because there &#119;&#097;&#115; &#110;&#111; need &#8211; the cells were deemed harmless. But the experiment upset &#097; lawyer named William Hyman who sat &#111;&#110; the hospital&#039;s board of directors. The state investigated, &#097;&#110;&#100; the hospital ultimately said any &#115;&#117;&#099;&#104; experiments &#119;&#111;&#117;&#108;&#100; require the patient&#039;s written consent.</p>
<p>At nearby Staten Island, &#102;&#114;&#111;&#109; 1963 to 1966, &#097; controversial medical study &#119;&#097;&#115; conducted &#097;&#116; the Willowbrook State School &#102;&#111;&#114; children with mental retardation. The children were intentionally &#103;&#105;&#118;&#101;&#110; hepatitis orally &#097;&#110;&#100; &#098;&#121; injection to &#115;&#101;&#101; if they &#099;&#111;&#117;&#108;&#100; &#116;&#104;&#101;&#110; be cured with gamma globulin.</p>
<p>Those two studies &#8211; &#097;&#108;&#111;&#110;&#103; with the Tuskegee experiment revealed &#105;&#110; 1972 &#8211; proved to be &#097; &quot;holy trinity&quot; &#116;&#104;&#097;&#116; sparked extensive &#097;&#110;&#100; critical media coverage &#097;&#110;&#100; public disgust, said Susan Reverby, the Wellesley College historian who first discovered records of the syphilis study &#105;&#110; Guatemala.</p>
<p>Holmesburg Prison &#105;&#110; Philadelphia &#109;&#097;&#100;&#101; extensive use of inmates &#102;&#111;&#114; medical experiments. Some of the victims are &#115;&#116;&#105;&#108;&#108; around to talk &#097;&#098;&#111;&#117;&#116; it. Edward &quot;Yusef&quot; Anthony, featured &#105;&#110; &#097; book &#097;&#098;&#111;&#117;&#116; the studies, &#115;&#097;&#121;&#115; he agreed to &#104;&#097;&#118;&#101; &#097; layer of skin peeled &#111;&#102;&#102; his &#098;&#097;&#099;&#107;, which &#119;&#097;&#115; coated with searing chemicals to test &#097; drug. He did &#116;&#104;&#097;&#116; &#102;&#111;&#114; money to buy cigarettes &#105;&#110; prison.</p>
<p>&quot;I said &#039;&#111;&#104; &#109;&#121; God, &#109;&#121; &#098;&#097;&#099;&#107; &#105;&#115; &#111;&#110; fire! &#116;&#097;&#107;&#101; &#116;&#104;&#105;&#115; . . . &#111;&#102;&#102; me!&#039; &quot; Anthony said &#105;&#110; an interview with The &#097;&#115;&#115;&#111;&#099;&#105;&#097;&#116;&#101;&#100; Press, as he recalled the beginning of weeks of intense itching &#097;&#110;&#100; agonizing pain.</p>
<p>The government responded with reforms. &#097;&#109;&#111;&#110;&#103; them: The U.S. Bureau of Prisons &#105;&#110; the mid-1970s effectively excluded &#097;&#108;&#108; research &#098;&#121; drug companies &#097;&#110;&#100; &#111;&#116;&#104;&#101;&#114; &#111;&#117;&#116;&#115;&#105;&#100;&#101; agencies &#119;&#105;&#116;&#104;&#105;&#110; federal prisons.</p>
<p>As the supply of prisoners &#097;&#110;&#100; mental patients dried up, researchers looked to &#111;&#116;&#104;&#101;&#114; countries.</p>
<p>It &#109;&#097;&#100;&#101; sense. Clinical trials &#099;&#111;&#117;&#108;&#100; be done &#109;&#111;&#114;&#101; cheaply &#097;&#110;&#100; with &#102;&#101;&#119;&#101;&#114; rules. &#097;&#110;&#100; it &#119;&#097;&#115; easy to find patients who were &#116;&#097;&#107;&#105;&#110;&#103; &#110;&#111; medication, &#097; factor &#116;&#104;&#097;&#116; can complicate tests of &#111;&#116;&#104;&#101;&#114; drugs.</p>
<p>Additional sets of ethical guidelines &#104;&#097;&#118;&#101; &#098;&#101;&#101;&#110; enacted, &#097;&#110;&#100; few believe &#116;&#104;&#097;&#116; another Guatemala study &#099;&#111;&#117;&#108;&#100; happen today. &quot;It&#039;s &#110;&#111;&#116; &#116;&#104;&#097;&#116; we&#039;&#114;&#101; out infecting anybody with &#116;&#104;&#105;&#110;&#103;&#115;,&quot; Caplan said.</p>
<p>Still, &#105;&#110; the last 15 years, two international studies sparked outrage.</p>
<p>One &#119;&#097;&#115; likened to Tuskegee. U.S.-funded doctors failed to give the AIDS drug AZT to &#097;&#108;&#108; the HIV-infected pregnant women &#105;&#110; &#097; study &#105;&#110; Uganda &#101;&#118;&#101;&#110; &#116;&#104;&#111;&#117;&#103;&#104; it &#119;&#111;&#117;&#108;&#100; &#104;&#097;&#118;&#101; protected their newborns. U.S. health officials argued the study &#119;&#111;&#117;&#108;&#100; &#097;&#110;&#115;&#119;&#101;&#114; questions &#097;&#098;&#111;&#117;&#116; AZT&#039;s use &#105;&#110; the developing world.</p>
<p>The &#111;&#116;&#104;&#101;&#114; study, &#098;&#121; Pfizer Inc., gave an antibiotic named Trovan to children with meningitis &#105;&#110; Nigeria, although there were doubts &#097;&#098;&#111;&#117;&#116; &#105;&#116;&#115; effectiveness &#102;&#111;&#114; &#116;&#104;&#097;&#116; disease. Critics blamed the experiment &#102;&#111;&#114; the deaths of 11 children &#097;&#110;&#100; the disabling of scores of others. Pfizer settled &#097; lawsuit with Nigerian officials &#102;&#111;&#114; $75 million but admitted &#110;&#111; wrongdoing.</p>
<p>Last year, the U.S. Department of Health &#097;&#110;&#100; Human Services&#039; inspector general reported &#116;&#104;&#097;&#116; &#098;&#101;&#116;&#119;&#101;&#101;&#110; 40 &#097;&#110;&#100; 65 percent of clinical studies of federally regulated medical products were done &#105;&#110; &#111;&#116;&#104;&#101;&#114; countries &#105;&#110; 2008, &#097;&#110;&#100; &#116;&#104;&#097;&#116; proportion &#112;&#114;&#111;&#098;&#097;&#098;&#108;&#121; has grown. The report also noted &#116;&#104;&#097;&#116; U.S. regulators inspected &#102;&#101;&#119;&#101;&#114; &#116;&#104;&#097;&#110; 1 percent of foreign clinical trial sites.</p>
<p>Monitoring research &#105;&#115; complicated, &#097;&#110;&#100; rules &#116;&#104;&#097;&#116; are &#116;&#111;&#111; rigid &#099;&#111;&#117;&#108;&#100; slow new drug development. But it&#039;s often hard to get information &#111;&#110; international trials, &#115;&#111;&#109;&#101;&#116;&#105;&#109;&#101;&#115; because of missing records &#097;&#110;&#100; &#097; paucity of audits, said Dr. Kevin Schulman, &#097; Duke University professor of medicine who has written &#111;&#110; the ethics of international studies.</p>
<p>These issues were &#115;&#116;&#105;&#108;&#108; being debated when, last October, the Guatemala study &#099;&#097;&#109;&#101; to light.</p>
<p>In the 1946-48 study, American scientists infected prisoners &#097;&#110;&#100; patients &#105;&#110; &#097; mental hospital &#105;&#110; Guatemala with syphilis, apparently to test whether penicillin &#099;&#111;&#117;&#108;&#100; prevent some sexually transmitted disease. The study &#099;&#097;&#109;&#101; up with &#110;&#111; &#117;&#115;&#101;&#102;&#117;&#108; information &#097;&#110;&#100; &#119;&#097;&#115; hidden &#102;&#111;&#114; decades.</p>
<p>The Guatemala study nauseated ethicists &#111;&#110; multiple levels. &#098;&#101;&#121;&#111;&#110;&#100; infecting patients with &#097; &#116;&#101;&#114;&#114;&#105;&#098;&#108;&#101; illness, it &#119;&#097;&#115; clear &#116;&#104;&#097;&#116; people &#105;&#110; the study did &#110;&#111;&#116; understand what &#119;&#097;&#115; being done to them &#111;&#114; were &#110;&#111;&#116; &#097;&#098;&#108;&#101; to give their consent. &#105;&#110;&#100;&#101;&#101;&#100;, &#116;&#104;&#111;&#117;&#103;&#104; it happened &#097;&#116; &#097; time when scientists were &#113;&#117;&#105;&#099;&#107; to publish research &#116;&#104;&#097;&#116; &#115;&#104;&#111;&#119;&#101;&#100; frank disinterest &#105;&#110; the rights of study participants, &#116;&#104;&#105;&#115; study &#119;&#097;&#115; buried &#105;&#110; file drawers.</p>
<p>&quot;It &#119;&#097;&#115; unusually unethical, &#101;&#118;&#101;&#110; &#097;&#116; the time,&quot; said Stark, the Wesleyan researcher.</p>
<p>&quot;When the president &#119;&#097;&#115; briefed &#111;&#110; the details of the Guatemalan episode, one of his first questions &#119;&#097;&#115; whether &#116;&#104;&#105;&#115; sort of thing &#099;&#111;&#117;&#108;&#100; &#115;&#116;&#105;&#108;&#108; happen today,&quot; said Rick Weiss, &#097; spokesman &#102;&#111;&#114; the White House Office of Science &#097;&#110;&#100; Technology Policy.</p>
<p>That it occurred overseas &#119;&#097;&#115; an opening &#102;&#111;&#114; the Obama administration to &#104;&#097;&#118;&#101; the bioethics panel seek &#097; new evaluation of international medical studies. The president also asked the Institute of Medicine to further probe the Guatemala study, but the IOM relinquished the assignment &#105;&#110; November, &#097;&#102;&#116;&#101;&#114; reporting &#105;&#116;&#115; own conflict of &#105;&#110;&#116;&#101;&#114;&#101;&#115;&#116;: &#105;&#110; the 1940s, five members of one of the IOM&#039;s sister organizations played prominent roles &#105;&#110; federal syphilis research &#097;&#110;&#100; &#104;&#097;&#100; links to the Guatemala study.</p>
<p>So the bioethics commission &#103;&#101;&#116;&#115; both tasks. To focus &#111;&#110; federally funded international studies, the commission has formed an international panel of &#097;&#098;&#111;&#117;&#116; &#097; dozen experts &#105;&#110; ethics, science &#097;&#110;&#100; clinical research. Regarding the look &#097;&#116; the Guatemala study, the commission has hired 15 staff investigators &#097;&#110;&#100; &#105;&#115; working with additional historians &#097;&#110;&#100; &#111;&#116;&#104;&#101;&#114; consulting experts.</p>
<p>The panel &#105;&#115; to send &#097; report to Obama &#098;&#121; September. Any further steps &#119;&#111;&#117;&#108;&#100; be up to the administration.</p>
<p>Some experts &#115;&#097;&#121; &#116;&#104;&#097;&#116; &#103;&#105;&#118;&#101;&#110; &#115;&#117;&#099;&#104; &#097; tight deadline, it &#119;&#111;&#117;&#108;&#100; be &#097; surprise if the commission produced substantive new information &#097;&#098;&#111;&#117;&#116; &#112;&#097;&#115;&#116; studies. &quot;They face &#097; really tough challenge,&quot; Caplan said.</p></p>
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