1 / 87

Human Subject Experimentation

Human Subject Experimentation. The Nazis Lessons for Contemporary Research The Role of the Physician in Society Martin Donohoe. “When a doctor [goes] wrong, he is the first of criminals. He has nerve and he has knowledge.” - Sherlock Holmes to Dr. Watson, Arthur Conan Doyle. Nazi Medicine.

simon-tyson
Download Presentation

Human Subject Experimentation

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Human Subject Experimentation The Nazis Lessons for Contemporary Research The Role of the Physician in Society Martin Donohoe

  2. “When a doctor [goes] wrong, he is the first of criminals. He has nerve and he has knowledge.” - Sherlock Holmes to Dr. Watson, Arthur Conan Doyle

  3. Nazi Medicine • Guiding philosophy = Hegelian (rational utility) • Social Darwinism - parallels in American and British Eugenics Movement • medical journals relatively silent • Ethics reduces morality to efficiency, economics, and aesthetics

  4. Nazi Medicine • An arm of state policy • Focus on racial purity • from eugenic sterilization (370,000) • to involuntary euthanasia (70,000) • to large-scale genocide (over 6 million)

  5. Nazi Medicine • Individual worth stated in economic terms; propaganda re obligations to the state • “I Accuse” • “Mathematics in the Service of Political Education”

  6. Nazi Medicine • Doctoring the nation more important than doctoring individuals - Nazism as “applied biology” (Rudolph Hess) • Focus on preventive medicine and public health: anti-tobacco and anti-alcohol campaigns, environmental toxins, organic farming -to improve Aryan stock • Nazi soldiers given anabolic steroids to increase aggresiveness

  7. Nazi Physicians • 52,000 physicians • National Socialist Party Members • Jews ostracized; replaced by young Aryans • today 0.2% of German physicians are Jews, c/w 17% pre-Nazis • 5% of non-Aryans committed suicide; 25% murdered

  8. Nazi Physicians • Economic hard times, physicians salaries rise, academic perks • Blutkitt (“blood cement”) • Rare resistance • Catholics • Marxists • Dutch

  9. Nazi “Physician-Researchers”(Torturers) • Dr. Sigmund Rascher - coagulation/amputation studies; hypothermia experiments • Dr. Karl Gebhart: heteroplastic transplantation experiments • c.f. Stalin’s attempts to create interspecies (half-men/half-apes) “super-warriors” • Drs. Karl Clausberg and Viktor Brack: X-irradiation/sterilization

  10. Nazi “Physician-Researchers”(Torturers) • Drs. Joachim Mrugowsky, Erwin Ding-Schuler, and Waldemar Hoven: IV phenol and gasoline executions • Dr. Friedrich Wegener (“Wegener’s Granulomatosis”): German pathologist, Nazi party member, autopsied a prisoner with oxygen injected into his bloodstream in an embolism study; may have participated in experiments on concentration camp inmates

  11. Nazi “Physician-Researchers”(Torturers) • Dr Hans Conrad Reiter (formerly “Reiter’s Syndrome”, now “reactive arthritis”): senior Nazi official • Dr. Joseph Mengele: Septicemia/twin vivisection studies • Dr. Hans Eppinger - “father of modern hepatology”

  12. “Indirect Participants” • Prof. J Hallevorden: “Look here now, boys, if you are going to kill all these people at least take the brains out so that the material could be utilized … the more (brains) the better….I accepted these brains of course. Where they came from and how they came to me was really none of my business.”

  13. Doctors and Resistance • German invasion of Poland (1939) • Drs Eugene Lazowski and Stanislaw Matulewicz created a fake typhus epidemic, using a harmless bacterium to innoculate non-Jews, knowing that infected Jews would be summarily executed • Germans fooled, quarantined area, many Jews escaped death

  14. Nuremberg Doctors’ Trial • 23 German physicians tried • 16 found guilty • 7 hanged (incl. Gebhardt, Brack, Hoven, and Mrugowsky)

  15. Nuremberg Doctors’ Trial • Rascher died before trial • Mengele fled for Argentina (remains verified 1985) • Hallevorden committed suicide before trial • Otto Ambros (chemist) – invented sarin (nerve gas), convicted of mass murder at Nuremberg Trials, later freed and worked with US chemical industry on thalidomide

  16. Nuremberg Code • Voluntary consent is absolutely essential • Avoidance of unnecessary physical and mental suffering • Option to quit/responsibility to terminate • Other safeguards

  17. Declaration of Geneva • “I will not permit considerations of religion, nationality, race, party politics or social standing to intervene between my duty and my patient” • “I will not use my medical knowledge contrary to the laws of humanity.” • “It is unethical for physicians to employ scientific knowledge to imperil health or destroy life.”

  18. Declaration of Helsinki • Patients’ rights to respect, self determination, informed decision-making • Investigators’ duties: primacy of subjects’ welfare, ethical considerations take precedence over laws and regulation • Allows for surrogate consent

  19. Japanese Abuses in WW II • Extensive biological and chemical weapons program involving prisoners of war • Many participants later achieved positions of prominence in Japanese medical schools and societies • Japanese scientists brought to Fort Detrick, MD, to help establish U.S. biological/chemical weapons program

  20. Post-WW II • Over 700 Nazi rocket scientists and their families brought to the U.S. (including Werner von Braun) to help build nuclear missile program • Operation Paperclip

  21. Post-WW II • German Medical Association unanimously issues blunt, straightforward apology for its role in the Holocaust (2012)

  22. Post-WW II Human Subject Experimentation • James Ketchum (psychiatrist), L Wilson Green (scientist), Van Murray Sim – psychochemical warfare studies for US Army • Ketchum later joined faculty of University of Texas Medical School

  23. Post-WW II Human Subject Experimentation • Tuskegee Syphilis Study • “The men’s status did not warrant ethical debate. They were subjects, not patients; clinical material, not sick people.” • Dr John Heller, Director of Venereal Diseases at PHS between 1943 and 1948 (interviewed in 1976)

  24. Studies on Native Americans • Sterilizations • Radioactive iodine to study adaptation of thyroid gland to extreme cold • Forced removal of children to English language, religious schools (c.f., Australia) • Distrust and reluctance of minorities to participate in medical research

  25. Research on Prisoners • 1905: cholera experiments on “volunteers” • 1915: Joseph Goldberger – pellagra studies • Prisoners pardoned or paroled in exchange for participation • 1941: Physician William Black infects children with herpes virus, paper published by J Peds

  26. Post-WW II Human Subject Experimentation • Pharmaceutical and government sponsored studies on prisoners • 1940s and 1950s esp. • Halted in mid-1970s after drug company executives admitted prisoners were cheaper to use than chimpanzees • WW II: gonorrhea, gas gangrene, dengue fever, malaria

  27. Post-WW II Human Subject Experimentation • Guatemala STD study (1946-8) • U.S. researchers deliberately infected 1,308 prisoners, military conscripts, prostitutes, orphans (provided by Sisters of Charity), and mental health patients with gonorrhea and syphilis • Scientists treated 87% of those infected (10% later required re-treatment), lost track of 13%

  28. Post-WW II Human Subject Experimentation • Guatemala STD study (1946-8) • Wives, children, and grandchildren treated, but sexual contacts not traced • Study approved by Guatemalan government • Received material for resource-starved institutions in return • Subjects received cigarettes for participating

  29. Post-WW II Human Subject Experimentation • Guatemala STD study (1946-8) • U.S. apologized (2010), has pledged $1 million to study research ethics, $775,000 to fight STDs in Guatemala • Class action lawsuit against U.S. government filed on behalf of 700 victims/relatives (2011)

  30. Post-WW II Human Subject Experimentation • Guatemala STD study (1946-8) • Dr. John Cutler (research coordinator): “Unless the law winks occasionally, you have no progress in medicine” • In 1943, Cutler infected volunteer federal prisoners in Indiana with gonorrhea in exchange for cash

  31. Post-WW II Human Subject Experimentation • Guatemala STD study (1946-8) • After Guatemala, Cutler oversaw the Tuskegee Syphilis Study • Was acting dean at University of Pittsburgh in 1960s

  32. Post-WW II Human Subject Experimentation • University of Minnesota malaria study (1940s) • Drs. Thomas Francis, Jr. and Jonas Salk infect psychiatric hospital residents with influenza (?if consent adequate?)

  33. Post-WW II Human Subject Experimentation • Atlanta, Alabama, and Terre Haute prison gonorrhea studies (1940s and 1950s) • Study evaluating effects of antibiotics on growth rate (1950s, Navy recruits, mentally disabled, Guatemalan schoolchildren) • Patuxent prison Asian flu experiment (1957) • U.S. govt.-sponsored radiation, LSD (MK Ultra) experiments

  34. Post-WW II Human Subject Experimentation • Pentagon/CIA experiments on soldiers and civilians • Edgewood Arsenal Experiments (involving more than 7,000 soldiers who were exposed to at least 250 biological and chemical agents) • Including sarin, VX, LSD, ritalin • Caused long-term health effects • Deliberate release of Serratia over San Francisco Bay; radioactive cadmium over St. Louis

  35. Post-WW II Human Subject Experimentation • 1963: Dr. Chester Southam injects tumor cells into extremely infirm patients at Jewish Hospital for Chronic Disease in NY without informing them that the shots contain cancer cells • Southam later elected President of American Association for Cancer Research

  36. Post-WW II Human Subject Experimentation • Willowbrook Hepatitis Experiments (1960s) • Pre-WW1: Joseph Goldberger’s pellagra experiments on Mississippi prisoners • Henry Beecher, NEJM (1966)

  37. Post-WW II Human Subject Experimentation • Ongoing sterilization programs • Buck v. Bell (USSC, 1927) – 60,000 Americans sterilized • WI, NJ, CA, IN, NC, OR, others • Alabama’s Governor Graves vetoed law in 1930s law citing “hazard to personal rights” • Oregon governor Kitzhaber apologized in 2002 for the over 2500 state-forced sterilizations that occurred between 1917 and 1983 • 2012 – NC to compensate victims

  38. Post-WW II Human Subject Experimentation • Iowa elementary school race experiment (1968; good or bad?) • Milgram’s obedience studies (1963); Milgram redux (2008) • Soviet psychiatry • US military/pharmaceutical vaccine and medication trials in the developing world

  39. GM foods, biopharmaceuticals • Largest uncontrolled trial in history of humanity • E.g., Chinese children with vitamin A deficiency used for feeding trials of Golden Rice by Tufts University investigators • Without preceding animal studies • ? Nature of informed consent • May violate Nuremberg Code

  40. Research on Prisoners • >90% of pharmaceutical industry research in early 1970s • Rapidly curtailed by state/federal laws and new university regulations • 2006: IOM approves with safeguards • 2009: 44% of jurisdictions allow compensation

  41. Self-Experimentation • Albert Hoffman (LSD) • Werner Forssmann (right heart catheterization) • Barry Marshall (Helicobacter pylori) • Others

  42. Disturbing Experiments • Inter-species breeding (ape-man, Ilya Ivanovich Ivanov, Guinea, 1927) • Two-headed dog (Vladimir Petrovich Demikhov, 1950s, Russia) • Monster Study (Wendell Johnson, 1939, University of Iowa) – deliberate induction of stuttering in orphan children

  43. Contemporary Issues and Ethical Dilemmas • 90% of research dollars spent on diseases affecting 10% of the world’s population • Neglected tropical diseases • Research on special populations (cultural minorities, prisoners, developing world, etc.) • Ghostwriters • Contract Research Organizations • Role of institutional and for-profit IRBs

  44. Contemporary Issues and Ethical Dilemmas • Use of placebo controls • Various drug trials • Anti-HIV medications and maternal-fetal transmission(sub-Saharan Africa) • Surfactant for neonatal RDS (Brazil, Bolivia) • Hep A vaccine (Thailand) • Trovan/meningitis/Nigeria (control = inadequate ceftriaxone dose)

  45. Contemporary Issues and Ethical Dilemmas • Large majority of phase 3 US drug company trial sites outside US, many in developing countries • Majority of developing nation trial sites without institutional review boards • Victims may seek redress under “Alien Torts Statute” • ICE drugging immigrants for deportation

  46. Contemporary Issues and Ethical Dilemmas • Nerve-sparing clitoroplasty as substitute for female genital cutting • AAP reversal of position (2010) • Kennedy Krieger Institute (Johns Hopkins) lead paint abatement study (1992)

  47. Contemporary Issues and Ethical Dilemmas • Uninsured become research subjects to receive needed care • Human guinea pigs (professional lab rats) • Parent investigators • Neonatal analgesia

  48. Contemporary Issues and Ethical Dilemmas • Under-representation of women and minorities in clinical trials • Trust issues: • Racial minorities often wary of participation in medical experiments

  49. Organ Donation • 2009 survey • 50% of adults afraid that physicians will not try as hard to save their lives if they have agreed to donate organs • 44% fear their organs might be sold on the black market • May explain in part why only 45% of U.S. adults have registered as organ donors

More Related