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  Vol. 276 No. 20, November 27, 1996 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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Nuremberg and the issue of wartime experiments on US prisoners. The Green Committee

J. M. Harkness
Department of Science and Technology Studies, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14850, USA. jmh17@cornell.edu.

Defense attorneys at the Nuremberg Medical Trial argued that no ethical difference existed between experiments in Nazi concentration camps and research in US prisons. Investigations that had taken place in an Illinois prison became an early focus of this argument. Andrew C. Ivy, MD, whom the American Medical Association had selected as a consultant to the Nuremberg prosecutors, responded to courtroom criticism of research in his home state by encouraging the Illinois governor to establish a committee to evaluate prison research. The governor named a committee and accepted Ivy's offer to chair the panel. Late in the trial, Ivy testified--drawing on the authority of this committee--that research on US prisoners was ethically ideal. However, the governor's committee had never met. After the trial's conclusion, the committee report was published in JAMA, where it became a source of support for experimentation on prisoners.

THIS ARTICLE HAS BEEN CITED BY OTHER ARTICLES

Subjects or Objects? Prisoners and Human Experimentation
Lerner
NEJM 2007;356:1806-1807.
FULL TEXT  

The Significance of the Nuremberg Code
Harkness and Shuster
NEJM 1998;338:995-996.
FULL TEXT  





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