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2.
Ethics Hum Res ; 41(2): 29-34, 2019 Mar.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30895754

RESUMEN

The U.S. Public Health Service's sexually transmitted disease (STD) experiments in Guatemala are an important case study not only in human subjects research transgressions but also in the response to serious lapses in research ethics. This case study describes how individuals in the STD experiments were tested, exposed to STDs, and exploited as the source of biological specimens-all without informed consent and often with active deceit. It also explores and evaluates governmental and professional responses that followed the public revelation of these experiments, including by academic institutions, professional organizations, and the U.S. federal government, pushing us to reconsider both how we prevent such lapses in the future and how we respond when they are first revealed.


Asunto(s)
Ética en Investigación/historia , Experimentación Humana no Terapéutica/ética , Experimentación Humana no Terapéutica/historia , Sujetos de Investigación , Enfermedades de Transmisión Sexual/inducido químicamente , Enfermedades de Transmisión Sexual/historia , United States Public Health Service/ética , Adulto , Niño , Coerción , Decepción , Femenino , Guatemala , Historia del Siglo XX , Humanos , Consentimiento Informado/ética , Masculino , Manejo de Especímenes/ética , Manejo de Especímenes/historia , Estados Unidos , Poblaciones Vulnerables/etnología
5.
J Med Ethics ; 43(4): 270-276, 2017 04.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27003420

RESUMEN

Unit 731, a biological warfare research organisation that operated under the authority of the Imperial Japanese Army in the 1930s and 1940s, conducted brutal experiments on thousands of unconsenting subjects. Because of the US interest in the data from these experiments, the perpetrators were not prosecuted and the atrocities are still relatively undiscussed. What counts as meaningful moral repair in this case-what should perpetrators and collaborator communities do decades later? We argue for three non-ideal but realistic forms of moral repair: (1) a national policy in Japan against human experimentation without appropriate informed and voluntary consent; (2) the establishment of a memorial to the victims of Unit 731; and (3) US disclosure about its use of Unit 731 data and an apology for failing to hold the perpetrators accountable.


Asunto(s)
Guerra Biológica , Complicidad , Violaciones de los Derechos Humanos , Medicina Militar , Experimentación Humana no Terapéutica , Crímenes de Guerra , Guerra Biológica/ética , Guerra Biológica/historia , Guerra Biológica/legislación & jurisprudencia , Códigos de Ética , Ética Médica , Gobierno Federal/historia , Historia del Siglo XX , Violaciones de los Derechos Humanos/ética , Violaciones de los Derechos Humanos/historia , Violaciones de los Derechos Humanos/legislación & jurisprudencia , Humanos , Consentimiento Informado , Japón , Medicina Militar/historia , Obligaciones Morales , Experimentación Humana no Terapéutica/ética , Experimentación Humana no Terapéutica/historia , Experimentación Humana no Terapéutica/legislación & jurisprudencia , Política , Responsabilidad Social , Estados Unidos , Crímenes de Guerra/ética , Crímenes de Guerra/historia , Crímenes de Guerra/legislación & jurisprudencia
6.
Uisahak ; 26(3): 545-578, 2017 Dec.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29311536

RESUMEN

The Tuskegee Study of Untreated Syphilis in the Negro Male was an observational study on African-American males in Tuskegee, Alabama between 1932 and 1972. The U. S. Public Health Service ran this study on more than 300 people without notifying the participants about their disease nor treating them even after the introduction of penicillin. The study included recording the progress of disease and performing an autopsy on the deaths. This paper explores historical backgrounds enabled this infamous study, and discusses three driving forces behind the Tuskegee Study. First, it is important to understand that the Public Health Service was established in the U. S. Surgeon General's office and was operated as a military organization. Amidst the development of an imperial agenda of the U.S. in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, the PHS was responsible for protecting hygiene and the superiority of "the American race" against infectious foreign elements from the borders. The U.S. Army's experience of medical experiments in colonies and abroad was imported back to the country and formed a crucial part of the attitude and philosophy on public health. Secondly, the growing influence of eugenics and racial pathology at the time reinforced discriminative views on minorities. Progressivism was realized in the form of domestic reform and imperial pursuit at the same time. Major medical journals argued that blacks were inclined to have certain defects, especially sexually transmitted diseases like syphilis, because of their prodigal behavior and lack of hygiene. This kind of racial ideas were shared by the PHS officials who were in charge of the Tuskegee Study. Lastly, the PHS officials believed in continuing the experiment regardless of various social changes. They considered that black participants were not only poor but also ignorant of and even unwilling to undergo the treatment. When the exposure of the experiment led to the Senate investigation in 1973, the participating doctors of the PHS maintained that their study offered valuable contribution to the medical research. This paper argues that the combination of the efficiency of military medicine, progressive and imperial racial ideology, and discrimination on African-Americans resulted in the Tuskegee Syphilis Experiment.


Asunto(s)
Negro o Afroamericano/historia , Experimentación Humana no Terapéutica/historia , Racismo/historia , Sífilis/historia , United States Public Health Service/historia , Alabama , Historia del Siglo XX , Humanos , Masculino , Medicina Militar/historia , Experimentación Humana no Terapéutica/ética , Sujetos de Investigación/historia , Estados Unidos , Privación de Tratamiento/historia
7.
Cuad. bioét ; 27(90): 139-162, mayo-ago. 2016.
Artículo en Español | IBECS | ID: ibc-155649

RESUMEN

En el trabajo se aborda el testimonio de la doctora alsaciana, Adélaïde Hautval, sobre la pseudomedicina practicada en el Lager y sobre su negativa a colaborar en el crimen contra la humanidad. A través de su diario de la deportación y de las actas de un peculiar juicio a Auschwitz celebrado en Londres en 1964, nos adentramos en los dilemas ético-profesionales que tuvieron que afrontar los médicos prisioneros en aquel escenario y que, en su caso, dieron lugar a acciones de resistencia ante la barbarie, de desobediencia a sus superiores y de solidaridad con las víctimas capaces de iluminar la actitud a tomar ante los dispositivos biopolíticos contemporáneos


This article approaches the testimony of the Alsatian psychiatrist Dr Adélaïde Hautval on the pseudomedicine that was practiced in the Medical experimentation Block 10 of Auschwitz Birkenau, and on her refusal to take part in this crime against humanity. By reading her deportation diary and the acts of a peculiar judgment in Auschwitz that was celebrated in London in 1964, we are confronted with the ethical and professional dilemmas that doctors, who were themselves prisoners, had to face in this situation, and that incited them to resist inhumanity by acts, to disobey their superiors, and to be solidary with the victims. This attitude enlightens us on the course to follow in front of the bio-political policies of today


Asunto(s)
Humanos , Experimentación Humana no Terapéutica/historia , Campos de Concentración/historia , Ética Médica/historia , Holocausto/historia , Crímenes de Guerra , Víctimas de Crimen , Violaciones de los Derechos Humanos
9.
Actas dermo-sifiliogr. (Ed. impr.) ; 105(9): 847-853, nov. 2014. ilus
Artículo en Español | IBECS | ID: ibc-129354

RESUMEN

Incluso después de la promulgación del código de Nuremberg las investigaciones sobre sífilis continuaron alejándose en muchas ocasiones de los estándares éticos. En este artículo hemos revisado las investigaciones que sobre esta enfermedad tuvieron lugar después de la Segunda Guerra Mundial, centrándonos en los casos de Guatemala y de Tuskegee. En Guatemala durante los a˜nos 1946 a 1948 se inoculó deliberadamente a más de 1.000 adultos sífilis, cancroide y gonorrea, y se hicieron miles de serologías a poblaciones indígenas o a ni˜nos huérfanos. El experimento Tuskegee sobre sífilis fue realizado entre 1932 y 1972 por el Servicio Público de Salud de los Estados Unidos para estudiar la evolución natural de esta enfermedad en ausencia de tratamiento. Se realizó sobre un grupo de población rural de raza negra y no se interrumpió a pesar de la introducción de tratamientos eficaces para la resolución de la enfermedad durante estos años (1945)


Even after the Nuremberg code was published, research on syphilis often continued to fall far short of ethical standards. We review post-World War II research on this disease, focusing on the work carried out in Guatemala and Tuskegee. Over a thousand adults were deliberately inoculated with infectious material for syphilis, hancroid, and gonorrhea between 1946 and 1948 in Guatemala, and thousands of serologies were performed in individuals belonging to indigenous populations or sheltered in orphanages. The Tuskegee syphilis study, conducted by the US Public Health Service, took place between 1932 and 1972 with the aim of following the natural history of the disease when left untreated. The subjects belonged to a rural black population and the study was not halted when effective treatment for syphilis became available in 1945


Asunto(s)
Humanos , Sífilis , Gonorrea , Experimentación Humana no Terapéutica/historia , Ética Médica/historia , Historia de la Medicina , Neisseria gonorrhoeae/patogenicidad , Treponema pallidum/patogenicidad , Violaciones de los Derechos Humanos , Guatemala
10.
Stud Hist Philos Biol Biomed Sci ; 48 Pt B: 218-30, 2014 Dec.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25282391

RESUMEN

In 1960, J. Anthony Morris, a molecular biologist at the US National Institutes of Health conducted one of the only non-therapeutic clinical studies of the cancer virus SV40. Morris and his research team aimed to determine whether SV40 was a serious harm to human health, since many scientists at the time suspected that SV40 caused cancer in humans based on evidence from in vivo animal studies and experiments with human tissue. Morris found that SV40 had no significant effect but his claim has remained controversial among scientists and policymakers through the present day--both on scientific and ethical grounds. Why did Morris only conduct one clinical study on the cancer-causing potential of SV40 in healthy humans? We use the case to explain how empirical evidence and ethical imperatives are, paradoxically, often dependent on each other and mutually exclusive in clinical research, which leaves answers to scientific and ethical questions unsettled. This paper serves two goals: first, it documents a unique--and uniquely important--study of clinical research on SV40. Second, it introduces the concept of "the stowaway," which is a special type of contaminant that changes the past in the present moment. In the history of science, stowaways are misfortunes that nonetheless afford research that otherwise would have been impossible specifically by creating new pasts. This case (Morris' study) and concept (the stowaway) bring together history of science and philosophy of history for productive dialog.


Asunto(s)
Investigación Biomédica/historia , Principios Morales , Infecciones por Polyomavirus/historia , Prisiones/historia , Virus 40 de los Simios , Infecciones Tumorales por Virus/historia , Virología/historia , Animales , Investigación Biomédica/ética , Historiografía , Historia del Siglo XX , Humanos , Biología Molecular/historia , National Institutes of Health (U.S.)/historia , Experimentación Humana no Terapéutica/ética , Experimentación Humana no Terapéutica/historia , Infecciones por Polyomavirus/virología , Prisioneros/historia , Virus Sincitiales Respiratorios , Ciencia/ética , Ciencia/historia , Infecciones Tumorales por Virus/virología , Estados Unidos , Virología/ética
12.
Bull Soc Pathol Exot ; 106(2): 131-7, 2013 May.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23516011

RESUMEN

In the 19(th) century, a devastating epidemic of visceral leishmaniasis (kala-azar) swept through northeast India. After identification of the pathogenic agent, Leishmania donovani, in 1903, the question of its transmission remained to be resolved. In 1904, thanks to work by L. Rogers on cultures of this parasite it became probable that a haematophagous arthropod was responsible for transmission. J.A. Sinton suggested, in 1925, the distribution of the sand fly Phlebotomus argentipes was similar to that of the disease and, thereafter, two independent teams led by H.E. Shortt in Assam and R. Knowles and L. Napier in Calcutta concentrated on this potential vector. Parallel work was in progress in China, directed by E. Hindle and W. S. Patton for the Royal Society Kala-azar Commission, on another species of sand fly. In 1942 the Assam workers transmitted L. donovani to five human volunteers by the bites of colonised P. argentipes and the race was over.


Asunto(s)
Insectos Vectores/parasitología , Leishmania donovani/aislamiento & purificación , Leishmaniasis Visceral/historia , Phlebotomus/parasitología , Medicina Tropical/historia , Animales , Antiprotozoarios/historia , Antiprotozoarios/uso terapéutico , Historia del Siglo XX , Humanos , India , Mordeduras y Picaduras de Insectos/parasitología , Leishmaniasis Visceral/tratamiento farmacológico , Leishmaniasis Visceral/transmisión , Experimentación Humana no Terapéutica/ética , Experimentación Humana no Terapéutica/historia , Compuestos Organometálicos/historia , Compuestos Organometálicos/uso terapéutico , Urea/análogos & derivados , Urea/historia , Urea/uso terapéutico
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