Human experimentation involves medical experiments performed on human beings. It is an important part of medical research, and many people volunteer for clinical trials of medical treatments. Some people also volunteer to be subjects for experiments in basic medical science and biology.
Some experiments can involve the testing of cosmetic products or ingredients on humans instead of animals. In some notable cases, doctors have performed experiments on themselves, when they have been unwilling to risk the lives of others. This is known as self-experimentation.
A famous example of such research were the Edward Jenner experiments, in which he first tested smallpox vaccines on his son and neighbourhood children. In an instance of self-experimentation, Johann Jorg swallowed 17 drugs in various doses to record their properties. Conversely, the famous scientist Louis Pasteur "agonized over treating humans," though he was confident of previous results obtained through animal trials. He consented to treat a human only when he was convinced that the death of his first test subject, the child Joseph Meister, "appeared inevitable." (Rothman 1993)
Walter Reed's well-known experiments to develop an inoculation for yellow fever led these advances. Reed's vaccine experiments were carefully scrutinized, however, unlike earlier trials. (Brady 1982)
Medical experimentation has also been performed on humans without informed consent, both covertly and under coercion. The pretext of medical experimentation has been used as a justification for some atrocities. From 1932 until the 1970s, in the United States, citizens were experimented upon in the Tuskegee Syphilis Study.
The result of these proceedings was the Nuremberg Code. It includes the following guidlines, among others, for researchers:
In Japan, Unit 731 experimented with prisoner vivisection, dismemberment and induced epidemics on a very large scale from the late 1920s onward.
Immunity was exchanged with America after the war for a tiny part of the results, so that in postwar Japan Ishii and others continued to hold honoured positions. The Soviets were blocked from most access to those responsible by the Americans, who coveted the Japanese results. The effects were lasting and China is still working to counteract the effects of buried pathogen caches.
In 1940 in the United States, four hundred prisoners in Chicago were infected with malaria to study the effects of new and experimental drugs for the disease. Beginning in 1942, mustard gas experiments were conducted on 4,000 United States servicemen in order to study the effects on the human nervous system. These tests concluded in 1945.
Fort Detrick in Maryland was the headquarters of US biological warfare experiments.Operation Pettycoat involved the injection of infectious agents to observe their effects in human subjects *.
In 1974, the United States Congress authorized the formation of the National Commission for the Protection of Human Subjects in Biomedical and Behavioral Research, known to most people in research ethics as the National Commission. Congress charged the National Commission to identify the basic ethical principles that underlie the conduct of human research. To accomplish this task, the National Commission looked at writings and discussions that had taken place to date and asked, "What are the basic ethical principles that are used to judge the ethics of human subject research?" Congress also asked the National Commission to develop guidelines to assure that human research is conducted in accordance with those principles.
In 1979, the National Commission met and published the Belmont Report. The Belmont Report is required reading for everyone involved in human subject research. The Belmont Report identifies three basic ethical principles that underlie all human subject research. These principles are commonly called the Belmont Principles. The Belmont Principles include respect for persons, beneficence, and justice.
The CIA ran an extensive toxicology and chemical/biological warfare program in cooperation with the US military.The Edgewood Arsenal and US Army Medical Research Institute for Infectious Diseases at Fort Detrick in Maryland were the main headquarters for such studies.The CIA developed many of the exotic toxins ,incapacitants,mind-altering substances and carcinogens. The CIA attempted to use toxins to assasinate on Fidel Castro and other world leaders such as General Abdul Karim Quassim of Iraq and Patrick Lumumba of the Congo who nationalized Congo's mineral mines.Mind-control substances were studied to facilitate interrogation and toxins were used as weapons in assasination.One of the toxins that the CIA studied extensively was derived from red algae called dinoflagellate which produced the red tide. The MK-ULTRA project was a CIA run human experiment program where prisoners and unwitting subjects were administered hallucigenic drugs in attempt to develop incapacitating substances and chemical mind control agents.The operation was run by Sidney Gottlieb. CIA researchers at the Bien Hua prison conducted human experiments on Vietnamese Communist subjects as a form of torture.The CIA was accused of murdering one of the unwitting subjects of the CIA LSD tests named Frank Olson .The CIA claimed that the man committed suicide as an after-effect of the LSD but the family exhumed the body and a forensic pathologist found evidence of blunt trauma to the head suggesting that he was knocked out before being thrown out of the window of a hotel .This supported the Olsen family's claims that CIA killed had him because he wanted to expose the MK-Ultra program *. The Church Investigation revealed some information on this project.It is interesting to note that Congressman Church who led the Congressional CIA inquirylater died in a mysterious plane crash.
A Manhattan District Attorney opened up an investigation but was did not have enough evidence to prosecute.It is interesting to note that soon after this happened, the former CIA director William Colby committed suicide and he would of been a key witness. Dr.Sidney Gottlieb requested that William Colby destroy most of the documents on the MK-Ultra program.Some suspect that the trial would produce information that would devastate the reputation of the William Colby and other officials involved in MK Ultra*.
The CIA also recruited the University of Pennsylvania dermatology profesor named Dr.Albert Klingman to run the studies of the Holmsburg Prison.Kligman also conducted human studies on the effects of blistering agents on human skin *.
The US government also conducted numerous human radiation experiments *.
Vivisection has long been practised on human beings. Herophilos, the "father of anatomy" and founder of the first medical school in Alexandria, was described by the church leader Tertullian as having vivisected at least 600 live prisoners. In recent times, the wartime programs of Nazi Dr. Josef Mengele and the Japanese military (Unit 731 and Dr. Fukujiro Ishiyama at Kyushu Imperial University Hospital) conducted human vivisections on concentration camp prisoners in their respective countries during WWII. In response to these atrocities, the medical profession internationally adopted the Nuremberg Code as a code of ethics. This code of ethics does not prohibit vivisection on humans.
Human volunteers can consent to be subjects for invasive experiments which may involve, for example, the taking of tissue samples (biopsies), or other procedures which require surgery on the volunteer. These procedures must be approved by ethical review, and carried out in an approved manner that minimizes pain and long term health risks to the subject *. Despite this, the term is generally recognized as pejorative: one would never refer to life-saving surgery, for example, as "vivisection." The use of the term vivisection when referring to procedures performed on humans almost always implies a lack of consent.
In the last several years, reports of unethical studies including gene transfer, cancer, and psychiatric research have heightened public awareness of issues related to human experimentation.
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