Herb Green
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George Herbert "Herb" Green (1916–2001) was the doctor at the centre of the Cartwright Inquiry, a commission set up to examine claims that he had been illegally experimenting on patients without their consent between 1966 and 1987. The inquiry found that he had conducted a study between 1966 and 1987 in which the cases of women with major cervical abnormalities were followed without definitive treatment, in an attempt to prove his "personal belief" that these abnormalities were "not a forerunner of invasive cancer."[1] According to Judith Macdonald, a researcher at the University of Waikato, Green was strongly opposed to abortion,[2] and his distaste for anything that reduced a woman's fertility was evident in his discussions with patients and his avoidance of the treatments available at the time (hysterectomy or cone biopsy).[2][3]
After Green retired, a paper[4] was published in 1984 discussing the outcome of Green's management of his patients. This paper came to the attention of Phillida Bunkle and Sandra Coney, who published an article entitled "An Unfortunate Experiment" in Metro Magazine in June 1987.[5] (The full phrase "an unfortunate experiment at National Women's Hospital" first appeared the year before in the New Zealand Medical Journal, in a letter from Professor David Skegg.[6]) The main media then used the term "unfortunate experiment" extensively.[citation needed]
The judge in the case, Dame Silvia Cartwright, ruled against Green, although he was never tried on account of being declared mentally and physically unfit to stand trial.
Defenders of Green allege that the flaws in his experimental methods were common among researchers in New Zealand between 1950 and the mid-1970's. These flaws included ignorance of the need for a hypothesis to be falsifiable and the lack of peer-review prior to the beginning of experimentation.[5]
Green graduated from Otago Medical School in 1945 and retired in the early 1980s, before the publication of the article in Metro. His specialities were gynaecology and obstetrics and he wrote a textbook on the subject that underwent several revisions. He died in 2001.[3][7]
[edit] Notes
- ^ Cartwright Inquiry - Summary of findings and recommendations.
- ^ a b Macdonald, Judith. "The Hidden Bits": Understanding Cervical Screening (PDF) 2.
- ^ a b "Obituary: Dr George Herbert Green" (PDF) (September 2001). O&G 3: 223.
- ^ McIndoe, William A.; McLean, M.R., Jones, R.W., Mullins, P.R. (1984). "The invasive potential of carcinoma in situ of the cervix". Obstetric Gynecology 64: 451–458.
- ^ a b Heslop, Barbara (6 August 2004). "‘All about research’—looking back at the 1987 Cervical Cancer Inquiry". New Zealand Medical Journal 117 (1199).
- ^ Jones, Ronald; Fitzgerald, Norman (2004-11-26). "The development of cervical cytology and colposcopy in New Zealand: 50 years since the first cytology screening laboratory at National Women’s Hospital". New Zealand Medical Journal 117.
- ^ "'Unfortunate experiment' doctor dies", Television New Zealand, March 8, 2001.
[edit] External links
- Heslop, Barbara (6 August 2004). "‘All about research’—looking back at the 1987 Cervical Cancer Inquiry". New Zealand Medical Journal 117 (1199).
- Response, and rejoinder: Auckland Women’s Health Council (24 September 2004). "Looking back at the 1987 Cervical Cancer Inquiry". New Zealand Medical Journal 117 (1202).
- Cartwright inquiry, Women's Health Action Trust