Advisory Committee on Human Radiation Experiments
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The Advisory Committee on Human Radiation Experiments was established in 1994 to investigate questions of the record of the United States government with respect to human radiation experiments executive order
The special committee was created by President Clinton. Jonathan D. Moreno was a senior staff member of the committee and later wrote the book Undue Risk Secret State Experiments on Humans.[1]
The thousand page document was released in October 1995 at a White House ceremony.[2]
Contents |
[edit] Background
The scandal first came to public attention in a newsletter called Science Trends in 1976 and in Mother Jones in 1981. Mother Jones reporter Howard Rosenburg used the FOIA to gather hundreds of documents to investigate total radiation studies which were done at Oak Ridge National Laboratory. The Mother Jones article triggered a hearing before the Subcommittee on Investigations and Oversight of the House Science and Technology Committee. Tenessee Congressman Al Gore chaired the hearing. Gore's subcommittee report stated that the radiation experiments were "satisfactory, but not perfect." [3][4][5]
In November 1986 a report by the staff of Massachusetts Congressman Ed Markey was released, entitled American Nuclear Guinea Pigs: three decades of radiation experiments on U.S. citizens. The Markey report stated there were thirty-one human radiation experiments involving nearly 700 people. The report recieved only cursory media coverage. Markey urged the Department of Energy to make every effort to find the experimental subjects and compensate them for damages. But these instructions were ignored by DOE officials, who figured if they stone walled long enough, the controversy would blow over. DOE officials knew who conducted the experiments, and the names of some of the subjects. After the report was released, Ronald Reagan and George Bush resisted opening investigations of the radiation experiments.[6][7]
The report found that between 1945 and 1947 eighteen hospital patients were injected with plutonium. The doctors selected patients likely to die in the near future. Despite the doctors prognosis, several lived for decades after.[8]
The American Nuclear Guinea Pigs report stated:
Although these experiments did provide information on the retention and absorption of radioactive material by the human body, the experiments are nonetheless repugnant because human subjects were essentially used as guinea pigs and calibration devices.[6] |
[edit] Investigative report
Triggering the Advisory Committee on Human Radiation Experiments was a series of Pulitzer Prize winning investigative reports by Eileen Welsome in The Albuquerque Tribune,[9] entitled The Plutonium Files. This report was different than Markey's, because Welsome revealed the names of the people injected with plutonium.[10] Welsome originally discovered the experiments while sifting through some documents at Kirtland Air Force Base in Albuquerque in the spring of 1987. What got her curiousity was a report on radioactive animal carcasses. The report identified the victims only by code names.[3]
[edit] Notes
- ^ Moreno, Jonathan D. (1999). Undue Risk Secret State Experiments on Humans. Freeman. ISBN 0716731428.
- ^ Moreno, p. XI
- ^ a b Alterman, Eric (February 11 2000). "The Plutonium Files". The Nation.
- ^ Welsome, Eileen (2000). The Plutonium Files: America's Secret Medical Experiments in the Cold War. Delta. ISBN 0385319541. p. 410, 412, 544, "Plutonium Experiment" Science Trends, Feb. 23, 1976, p. 128; Howard Rosenburg, Informed Consent, Mother Jones, September-October 1981, p. 21-44
- ^ "National Security Archive". 1981 Hearings on the Human Total Body Irradiation Program at Oak Ridge before the Subcommittee on Investigations and Oversight of the House Science and Technology Committee, 97th Cong., 1st Sess. (Sept. 23, 1981) (commonly referred to as the "Gore Hearing").
- ^ a b Welsome p. 414-415, 544
- ^ Moreno, p. X
- ^ Miltary Medical Ethics, Volume 2. DIANE Publishing. ISBN 1428910662. p. 525
- ^ Moreno, p. IX, XI
- ^ Karen, MacPherson (November 21 1999). "'The Plutonium Files' by Eileen Welsome ‘Plutonium Files’ sheds light on inhuman experiment". Pittsburgh Post Gazette.