Informed Consent: A Matter of Human Rights
When one is reminded of the Holocaust that occurred during World War II, it is difficult to suppress images of emaciated bodies, tormented and wasting away. However, many are not aware of the tortuous experiments carried out on prisoners of war in the name of science and medicine. During the war, human captives served as lab rats for Nazi physicians who studied transplantation, hypothermia and twin studies. These scientists found various ways to ease their conscience for the atrocities they carried out on their “patients” prior to the era of informed consent. After the war, the physicians were brought to justice at the Nuremburg Trials. Out of the trials, the Nuremburg code was developed. This code
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By ensuring all research participants engage on a volunteer basis, we protect their autonomy and preserve the dignity of human life. During the medical experiments that were conducted during the holocaust, the prisoners or test subjects were thought of as disposable objects, of which the Nazi scientists had an unlimited amount. This contributed to the heartless, cruel nature of many of the experiments. By viewing prisoners as disposable test subjects, Nazi physicians conducted experiments founded on little to no empirical research. It has been suggested by many that the experiments themselves were conducted primarily as a form of extermination, and secondarily, as actual research. By ensuring that we provide our patients with informed consent, we are forced to have a “reverence for human life” (Shuster, …show more content…
It is truly the tip of the iceberg when considering the other standards of practice set forth by the Nuremburg code. The code also discusses that a study must be designed to produce fruitful results. Many of the studies conducted by the Nazi physicians served as nothing more than a form of torture, such as experiments where limbs were amputated with the idea of transplanting them (Cohen, 1990). The Nuremburg code established that experiments must be designed to avoid unnecessary physical and mental suffering and injury, and that they should not occur if there is ‘reason to believe that death or disabling injury will occur (Nuremburg”, n.d.).” The code also established that the degree of risk taken must not exceed the importance of the problem to be
For example, in the years 1918 to 1922, research led by Dr. Leo L. Stanley at California’s San Quentin State Prison caused prisoners to be exposed to many experiments, such as getting transplanted testicles from recently dead prisoners or receiving “transplanted sex organs from rams, goats, and boars” (Krans). However, it seems that prisoner testing became more valuable around the time of War World II (1939-1945) because there were more cases on record. During the war, the Nazi doctors would do fatal experiments on prisoners without their consent (“Research with Prisoners”). For instance, Luftwaffe in 1942 did research on on hypothermia (Frater). One experiment happened when prisoners were put in a “tank of ice water for up to three hours” (Frater). Another one was when prisoners were left “naked in the open for several hours with temperatures below freezing” (Frater). These inmates were frequently told that the experiments were to help the German military
Edward Jenner's first test subject was the son of his gardner. Jenner infected him with cowpox from the pus he scrapped from the hand of a female farm worker. This directly contridicts the standard set by the Nuremburg Code along with the WHO Ethicial Guidelines. The Nuremburg Code was a set of moral and ethical standards that scientists
Have you ever taken the time to think about what the people of the holocaust went through? There were Jews, German Communists, Socialists, Social Democrats, Roma (Gypsies), Jehovah's Witnesses, homosexuals, and deviant people captured and transported to the concentration camps just because the Nazis did not think the were good enough. These people suffered from extensive torment, and neglect throughout the holocaust and in the concentration camps. There was hardly any food and because of that many died. They were also medically experimented on which killed them because there were many medicines tried on them and some were even injected with the disease itself. This paper will cover, medical experiments done on the captured, traveling to reach the concentration camps, and the treatment of the captured people.
During World War II, the Nazi conducted several experiments on their Jewish prisoners without their consent. According to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum there were there three types of experiments that where conducted to the prisoners1. The first type of experiment that was conducted was to improve the survival of the Axis military personnel in the frontline1. High-altitude experiments were conducted to see the effects of high altitude on the human body. The prisoners were put in low-pressure chambers to determine at what altitude it was safe for a pilot to eject from an aircraft that had been damage and was going down1. In the second type of experiment, prisoners were used to develop and test treatments for the most common illnesses
During the Holocaust, doctors had free reign to do whatever they wanted to any prisoner at any of the concentration camps. The majority of the prisoners were to be sent to the gas chambers and killed, so the doctors justified their torturous experiments by saying the patients were fated to die anyways. “Thus, instead of doing their job, instead of bringing assistance and comfort to the sick people who needed them most, instead of helping the mutilated and the handicapped to live, eat, and hope one more day, one more hour, doctors became their executioners” (Spitz 191). When men and women become doctors they take a vow. In this vow they state to keep the sick from harm and injustice and to never give any patient a deadly drug. The doctors of the Holocaust simply must have come to the conclusion that this vow, that they were required to make, no longer applied to them and the prisoners they were “treating”.
In the concentration camps of the Nazi Reich, hundreds of prisoners were tested on, in horrid medical experiments. The question of medical testing has been a heavily debated question since the start of our modern prison system. However, it seems quite obvious that even ignoring the blatant ethical issues at hand, prisoner testing is unviable at any large scale, due to the laws protecting prisoners as a vulnerable population. However, there is a point to be made about the relative cheapness of prisoners compared to other more commonly used test subjects. It would be possible to argue either way about prisoner testing, but in looking at the evidence the ethical and legal questions around prisoner testing provide a stronger base to argue from
Dr Mengele performed medical experiments on men, women and children prisoners of Auschwitz Death Camp. Mengele was given complete freedom under secrecy enabling him to give lethal injections, dissect, shot, freeze and even castarate his prisoner test subjects. These lethal injections, made from germs were used in attempt to artificially change the subject’s eye colour. The test subjects also known as the prisoners, either died from the experiment or from being shoot, very few survived. However, post mortem examinations were conducted whether they did from the experiment or
These Nazi Germans were on the brink of performing certain medical research on Jews that seemed more as torture than experimental. Such experiments entailed procedures such as, “The icy vat method [where a probe was inserted in their rectums and] the victim was then placed in the vat of cold water to freeze,” (Holocaust). Such experiments would help them discover what? Apparently this was indeed necessary for the Nazis were invading Russia and needed this intel on how to survive in the brittle cold they were venturing into. But we all know what will happen when the human body is exposed to these extreme cold temperatures: death. And even after countless deaths with these heating and freezing experiments the doctors would continue conducting them… straying from their original intentions. After all, how many Jews had to freeze to death until they got the concept? Apparently by genocide, the murder of hostages, reprisal raids, forced labor, "euthanasia," starvation, exposure, medical experiments, and terror bombing, and in the concentration and death camps, the Nazis murdered from 15,003,000 to 31,595,000 people (Rummel). This immense casualty of human lives lost for a few curious doctors wondering “What would happen if they ___” emphasizes the amount of unnecessary experimentation taking place. All of these human beings were poked and prodded like lab rats. And
Until the end of World War II, researchers established their own ethical standards and safeguards for human participants in their research. However, not all researchers were committed to the ethical treatment of human participants. The major impetus for a shift from individualized ethical guidelines was the uncovering of the brutal experiments performed on prisoners in Nazi concentration camps. A variety of sadistic “medical experiments” were conducted on unwilling participants. Some examples include breaking and re-breaking of bones (to see how many times they could be broken before healing failed to occur) and exposure to extremes of high altitude and freezing water (to see how long a person could survive). As a results of these atrocities
Concerns about human and animal use in research began in the late 1800s; throughout this time, there was a series of medical experiments performed by the Nazi German leaders on prisoners during World War II, as well as the Tuskegee syphilis study. Reports of abuse from
During World War II, a number of German physicians conducted painful and often deadly experiments on thousands of concentration camp prisoners without their consent. Unethical medical experimentation carried out during the Third Reich may be divided into three categories. The three categories consisted of experiments aimed at facilitating the survival of Axis military personnel. The second category of experimentation aimed at developing and testing pharmaceuticals and treatment methods for injuries and illnesses which German military and occupation personnel encountered in the field. While the third category of medical experimentation sought to advance the racial and ideological tenets of the Nazi worldview (https://www.ushmm.org).
In the early to middle 1900’s human experimentation was extremely common and often did not require any consent. As this research was being conducted there were many developments in medicine and research, but the way these experiments were performed were not ethically acceptable. During this time scientists had easy access to the terminally ill, hospitalized patients and soldiers which allowed them to do all of this scientific research. According to Horner and Minifie (2011), without consent from patients, many diseases were transmitted, such as gonorrhea, cancer and countless other diseases as well. These experimentations were condoned by some, but not everyone had the same outlooks toward it. A lot of these experiments eventually hit the media,
It is widely recognised that conducting violent research against moral is a crime, such as the experiments at the Nazi camp. However, it is a controversy on how to treat the results from these unethical researches. In my point of view, the results are separate from the moral obligations to the researcher, although the suffering and rights should be seriously respected. The results from unethical researches should be accessible to the public due to its value and validity, but should also be published and referenced under restrictions.
They stepped off a train into an unknown place, separated from loved ones, belongings taken away, feeling confused and targeted, and their only lasting comfort in this world is the hand gripping theirs tighter and tighter as they are “selected” by a sinister and mysterious man. This scenario, is a makeshift glimpse into the milieu and context of what many twins experienced when they arrived at Auschwitz, the home to Nazi research disasters in the 1940s. This one incident truly outlines the overall theme of how important research ethics are to the overall field of psychology. Moreover, the idea that Jews, as well as other groups, could so easily be targeted and dehumanized shines a light on the need for critical steps, or guidelines when conducting research. On that note, the studies of Mengele, relatively, broke every ethical barrier present in today’s research. Coupled with this was the aftermath of the war and the need for the Nuremberg code which was put into place in 1947 with the intention of adding protection to the authenticity of studies and increasing safety of everyone involved on various levels. In sum, the Nazi twin studies are a perfect example of what disastrous research looks like, and because of it the Nuremberg code was developed.
As a result, big groups of studies were formed by scientists in the concentration camps who conducted painful and immoral experiments with the Jews. According to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, in the article "Nazi Medical Experiments" they affirm that " … a number of German physicians conducted painful and often deadly experiments on thousands of concentration camp prisoners without their consent." These scientists were employed to experiment in Jews many different studies and hypothesis to create improvements for their own gain. Studies were then divided in three different