guardian.co.uk,
Associated Press,Tuesday 30 August 2011
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| Guatemalan president Alvaro Colom received an apology last year from US president Barack Obama. Photograph: Daniel Leclair / Reuters/REUTERS |
Shocking
new details of US medical experiments done in Guatemala in the 1940s, including
a decision to re-infect a dying woman in a syphilis study, have been disclosed
by a presidential panel.
The
Guatemala experiments are already considered one of the darker episodes of
medical research in US history, but panel members say the new information
indicates that researchers were unusually unethical, even when placed into the
historical context of a different era.
"The
researchers put their own medical advancement first and human decency a far
second," said Anita Allen, a member of the Presidential Commission for the
Study of Bioethical Issues.
From
1946-48, the US Public Health Service and the Pan American Sanitary Bureau
worked with several Guatemalan government agencies on medical research paid for
by the US government that involved deliberately exposing people to sexually
transmitted diseases.
The
researchers apparently were trying to see if penicillin, then relatively new,
could prevent infections in the 1,300 people exposed to syphilis, gonorrhea or
chancroid. Those infected included soldiers, prostitutes, prisoners and mental
patients with syphilis.
The
commission revealed on Monday that only about 700 of those infected received
some sort of treatment. Eighty-three people died, although it's not clear if
the deaths were directly due to the experiments.
The
research came up with no useful medical information, according to some experts.
It was hidden for decades but came to light last year after a Wellesley College
medical historian discovered records among the papers of Dr John Cutler, who
led the experiments.
President
Barack Obama called Guatemala's president, Alvaro Colom, to apologise. He also
ordered his bioethics commission to review the Guatemala experiments. That work
is nearly done. Though the final report is not due until next month, commission
members discussed some of the findings at a meeting on Monday in Washington.
They
revealed that some of the experiments were more shocking than was previously
known.
For
example, seven women with epilepsy, who were housed at Guatemala's Asilo de
Alienados (Home for the Insane), were injected with syphilis below the back of
the skull, a risky procedure. The researchers thought the new infection might
somehow help cure epilepsy. The women each got bacterial meningitis, probably
as a result of the unsterile injections, but were treated.
Perhaps the
most disturbing details involved a female syphilis patient with an undisclosed
terminal illness. The researchers, curious to see the impact of an additional
infection, infected her with gonorrhea in her eyes and elsewhere. Six months
later she died.
Dr Amy
Gutmann, head of the commission, described the case as "chillingly
egregious".
During that
time, other researchers were also using people as human guinea pigs, in some
cases infecting them with illnesses. Studies weren't as regulated then, and the
planning-on-the-fly feel of Cutler's work was not unique, some experts have
noted.
But panel
members concluded that the Guatemala research was bad even by the standards of
the time. They compared the work to a 1943 experiment by Cutler and others in
which prison inmates were infected with gonorrhea in Indiana. The inmates were
volunteers who were told what was involved in the study and gave their consent.
Many of the Guatemalan participants received no such explanation and did not
give informed consent, the commission said.
The
commission is working on a second report examining federally funded
international studies to make sure current research is being done ethically.
That report is expected at the end of the year.
Meanwhile,
the Guatemalan government has vowed to carry out its own investigation into the
Cutler study. A spokesman for the vice-president Rafael Espada said the report
should be done by November.
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| Marta Orellana, 74, a victim of the US syphilis trial when she was nine. 'They never gave me a chance to say no,' she says. Photograph: Rory Carroll for the Guardian |


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