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The Human Radiation Experiments Advisory Committee on Human Radiation Experiments

The Human Radiation Experiments By Advisory Committee on Human Radiation Experiments

The Human Radiation Experiments by Advisory Committee on Human Radiation Experiments


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Summary

This landmark volume describes experiments and environmental releases carried out or funded by U.S. government agencies in which people were exposed to radiation, usually in low doses, without their knowledge. It provides a historical review of government standards for human experiments, examines current ethics policies, and recommends changes.

The Human Radiation Experiments Summary

The Human Radiation Experiments: Final Report of the Advisory Committee on Human Radiation Experiments by Advisory Committee on Human Radiation Experiments

This book describes, in fascinating detail, a variety of experiments sponsored by the U.S. government in which people were exposed to radiation without their knowledge. After reviewing hundreds of thousands of documents from the Atomic Energy Commission and other agencies, the Advisory Committee appointed by President Clinton in January 1994 found that nearly 4,000 human radiation experiments--most involving very low doses of radioactive tracers--were sponsored by the federal government between 1944-1974. This book documents these findings to provide a fascinating if not disturbing reminder of both the shocking standards for human experimentation and the shrouded practice of government secrecy in recent history. Carried out at the height of the Cold War, experiments included feeding radioactive cereal to teenagers at a school for the mentally retarded, irradiating the testicles of prison inmates, injecting plutonium into hospital patients, and intentional releases of radiation into the environment. The book places these experiments within their historical context, and a review of the relevant government policies and ethics standards at the time is included. The analysis is then applied to contemporary research on human subjects. The book concludes with a discussion of the Committee's key findings and a set of recommendations for changes in in institutional review boards, the interpretation of ethics rules and policies, the conduct of research involving military personnel, the oversight and accountability for ethical violations, compensation for research injuries, and balancing national securities interests with the rights of the public. This compelling volume will prove to be a landmark in the development of standards for human experimentation. Ethicists, public health professionals and those interested in the history of medicine and Cold War history will be intrigued by the findings in this volume.

The Human Radiation Experiments Reviews

"The committee has built an archive that will be of invaluable use to anyone concerned with the past or future of human experimentation, indeed, to anyone intent on keeping government responsive to its citizens."--Journal of the American Medical Association "Excellent. Comprehensive, detailed, authoritative and clear ly written."--Canadian Medical Association Journal "...an intriguing read: part cold war history, part careful review of voluminous files, part commentary on the status of human subjects research historically and in the contemporary period, and part illustration of the state of bioethics research methodology as applied to public policy."--Hastings Center Report

About Advisory Committee on Human Radiation Experiments

About the Committee: On January 15, 1994, President Clinton appointed the Advisory Committee on Human Radiation Experiments to investigate reports of possibly unethical experiments funded by the government decades ago. The members of the Advisory Committee included fourteen private citizens from around the country: a representative of the general public, and thirteen experts in bioethics, radiation oncology and biology, nuclear medicine, epidemiology and biostatistics, public health, history of science and medicine, and law. The Advisory Committee submitted its final report to the President in late 1995, and this book contains the entire text of the report. It also includes the full text of the President's remarks in acceptance of the report and a complete index.

Table of Contents

PART I: ETHICS OF HUMAN SUBJECTS RESEARCH: A HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE ; 1. Government Standards for Human Experiments: The 1940s and 1950s ; 2. Postwar Professional Standards and Practices for Human Experiments ; 3. Government Standards for Human Experiments: The 1960s and 1970s ; 4. Ethics Standards in Retrospect ; PART II: CASE STUDIES ; 5. Experiments with Plutonium, Uranium, and Polonium ; 6. The AEC Program of Radioisotope Distribution ; 7. Nontherapeutic Research in Children ; 8. Total-Body Irradiation: Problems When Research and Treatment are Intertwined ; 9. Prisoners: A Captive Research Population ; 10. Atomic Veterans: Human Experimentation in Connection with Bomb Tests ; 11. Intentional Releases: Lifting the Veil of Security ; 12. Observational Data Gathering ; 13. Secrecy, Human Radiation Experiments, and Intentional Releases ; PART III: CONTEMPORARY PROJECTS ; 14. Current Federal Policies Governing Human Subjects Research ; 15. Research Proposal Review Project ; 16. Subject Interview Study ; Discussion of Part III ; PART IV. COMING TO TERMS WITH THE PAST, LOOKING AHEAD TO THE FUTURE: FINDINGS AND RECOMMENDATIONS ; 17. Findings ; 18. Recommendations

Additional information

NPB9780195107920
9780195107920
0195107926
The Human Radiation Experiments: Final Report of the Advisory Committee on Human Radiation Experiments by Advisory Committee on Human Radiation Experiments
New
Hardback
Oxford University Press Inc
1996-05-09
656
N/A
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