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1.
Med Humanit ; 49(3): 457-467, 2023 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36931722

ABSTRACT

This article analyses the complex narrative of Harriet Cole, a 36-year-old African-American woman whose body was delivered to the anatomy department of Hahnemann Medical School in 1888. The anatomist Rufus B Weaver used her preserved remains to create a singular anatomical specimen, an intact extraction of the 'cerebro-spinal nervous system'. Initially anonymised, deracialised and unsexed, the central nervous system specimen endured for decades before her identity as a working-class woman of colour was reunited with her remains. In the 1930s, media accounts began to circulate that Harriet Cole had bequeathed her remains to the anatomist, a claim that continues to circulate uncritically in the biomedical literature today. Although we conclude that this is likely a confabulation that erased the history of violence to her autonomy and her dead body, the rhetorical possibility that Harriet Cole might have chosen to donate her body to the medical school reflects the racial, political and legal dimensions that influenced how and why the story of Harriet Cole's 'gift' served multiple purposes in the century and a half since her death.


Subject(s)
Anatomy , Body Remains , Specimen Handling , Adult , Female , Humans , History, 20th Century , Anatomy/history , Specimen Handling/history , Black or African American
2.
Bull Hist Med ; 96(2): 151-181, 2022.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35912617

ABSTRACT

By the mid-1950s, formal body donation programs began to supplant the decades-long reliance on the anatomy acts that made the bodies of the indigent and unclaimed available for medical education and research. By the mid-1980s, nearly all American medical schools relied on voluntary anatomical gifts of dead bodies. Throughout the nineteenth century, a handful of Americans requested through wills, letters, and suicide notes that their corpses be given to doctors and medical schools. The dramatic expansion of American newspapers after the Civil War helped establish bequeathing one's body as an available, albeit eccentric, afterlife. A significant shift in American deathways in the twentieth century, the rise of blood donation and organ transplantation, and a serious decline in the number of unclaimed bodies spurred anatomists finally to accept, and then to promote, this new corporeal philanthropy.


Subject(s)
Anatomy , Education, Medical , Anatomy/education , Anatomy/history , Cadaver , Humans , Schools, Medical
3.
Hastings Cent Rep ; 50(6): 8-9, 2020 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33315257

ABSTRACT

This essay considers the issue of informed consent as it arose in the context of 1960s living kidney donors. In one of the earliest empirical inquiries into informed consent, psychiatrists Carl H. Fellner and John R. Marshall interviewed donors about their decision-making process and their experience and reflections on donorship. In their much-cited 1970 paper, the physicians reported that living donors, rather than reaching a reasoned, intellectual, and unemotional decision about donating a kidney (as stipulated in the Ethical Guidelines for Organ Transplantation issued by the American Medical Association's Judicial Council), instead made instantaneous and "irrational" decisions about participation. Fellner and Marshall's studies contributed to the public debate and professional discussion about the moral and ethical dimensions of donorship, even as they challenged the developing consensus on informed consent.


Subject(s)
Living Donors , Organ Transplantation , Decision Making , Empirical Research , Humans , Informed Consent , Morals , United States
4.
Ethics Hum Res ; 41(3): 39-40, 2019 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31108573
5.
J Natl Med Assoc ; 111(4): 352-362, 2019 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30777381

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: The first successful kidney transplant in humans was performed in 1954. In the following 25 years, the biomedical, ethical, and social implications of kidney transplantation were widely discussed by both healthcare professionals and the public. Issues relating to race, however, were not commonly addressed, representing a "blind spot" regarding racial disparities in access and health outcomes. METHODS: Through primary sources in the medical literature and lay press, this paper explores the racial dynamics of kidney transplantation in the 1950-1970s in the United States as the procedure grew from an experimental procedure to the standard of care for patients in end-stage renal disease (ESRD). RESULTS & DISCUSSION: An extensive search of the medical literature found very few papers about ESRD, dialysis, or renal transplant that mentioned the race of the patients before 1975. While the search did not reveal whether race was explicitly used in determining patient access to dialysis or transplant, the scant data that exist show that African-Americans disproportionately developed ESRD and were underrepresented in these early treatment populations. Transplant outcome data in the United States failed to include race demographics until the late 1970s. The Social Security Act of 1972 (PL 92-603) extended Medicare coverage to almost all Americans with ESRD and led to a rapid increase in both dialysis and kidney transplantation for African-Americans in ESRD, but disparities persist today.


Subject(s)
Black or African American/statistics & numerical data , Healthcare Disparities/history , Kidney Failure, Chronic/ethnology , Kidney Transplantation/history , Black or African American/history , Dialysis , Health Services Accessibility/history , Healthcare Disparities/ethnology , History, 20th Century , Humans , Kidney Failure, Chronic/history , Kidney Failure, Chronic/surgery , Medicare/history , Medicare/legislation & jurisprudence , United States
7.
Perspect Biol Med ; 59(1): 18-36, 2016.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27499482

ABSTRACT

Henry K. Beecher (1904-1976) played an important role in the development of bioethics. His 1966 article "Ethics and Clinical Research" in the New England Journal of Medicine intensified concern about the welfare of patients participating in clinical research, and his leadership in the 1968 Harvard Ad Hoc Committee on Brain Death redefined the determination of death. Beecher deserves, and even demands, explanation and explication. This essay offers a biographical perspective on the Harvard professor. In addition to his early life and education in both Kansas and Boston, the essay explores how Beecher's experiences in World War II and in the new geopolitical realities of the Cold War shaped his views about the ethical dilemmas of clinical research.


Subject(s)
Biomedical Research/ethics , Biomedical Research/history , Human Experimentation/ethics , Human Experimentation/history , Brain Death , History, 20th Century , Humans , Lysergic Acid Diethylamide/history , National Socialism/history , World War II
10.
Acad Med ; 90(6): 738-43, 2015 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25539516

ABSTRACT

Effectively developing professionalism requires a programmatic view on how medical ethics and humanities should be incorporated into an educational continuum that begins in premedical studies, stretches across medical school and residency, and is sustained throughout one's practice. The Project to Rebalance and Integrate Medical Education National Conference on Medical Ethics and Humanities in Medical Education (May 2012) invited representatives from the three major medical education and accreditation organizations to engage with an expert panel of nationally known medical educators in ethics, history, literature, and the visual arts. This article, based on the views of these representatives and their respondents, offers a future-tense account of how professionalism can be incorporated into medical education.The themes that are emphasized herein include the need to respond to four issues. The first theme highlights how ethics and humanities can provide a response to the dissonance that occurs in current health care delivery. The second theme focuses on how to facilitate preprofessional readiness for applicants through reform of the medical school admission process. The third theme emphasizes the importance of integrating ethics and humanities into the medical school administrative structure. The fourth theme underscores how outcomes-based assessment should reflect developmental milestones for professional attributes and conduct. The participants emphasized that ethics and humanities-based knowledge, skills, and conduct that promote professionalism should be taught with accountability, flexibility, and the premise that all these traits are essential to the formation of a modern professional physician.


Subject(s)
Education, Medical/methods , Education, Premedical/methods , Ethics, Medical/education , Humanities/education , Professional Competence , Curriculum , Humans , School Admission Criteria , Social Responsibility
16.
Bull Hist Med ; 81(1): 94-115, 2007.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17369664

ABSTRACT

This paper explores the cultural representations of cancer in popular Hollywood films released between 1930 and 1970. These cinematic treatments were not representative of the types of cancer that increasingly afflicted Americans, nor were filmmakers and studios concerned with realistic representations of the disease, its treatment, and its outcomes. As in the "epidemic entertainments" of the early twentieth century that portrayed diseases as cultural commodities, popular filmmakers selectively projected some cancers rather than others, favoring those that were less offensive and more photogenic. Although the characters became weak and died, they did so without gross transformations of their bodies. This paper argues that such representations nonetheless informed American attitudes about cancer and the role of medical research in overcoming the disease.


Subject(s)
Attitude to Health/ethnology , Motion Pictures/history , Neoplasms/history , Public Health/history , Social Perception , Culture , Female , History, 20th Century , Humans , Male , Neoplasms/psychology , United States
17.
Osiris ; 20: 205-31, 2005.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20503764

ABSTRACT

The history of human experimentation in the twelve years between Hitler's rise to power and the end of the Second World War is notorious in the annals of the twentieth century. The horrific experiments conducted at Dachau, Auschwitz, Ravensbrueck, Birkenau, and other National Socialist concentration camps reflected an extreme indifference to human life and human suffering. Unfortunately, they do not reflect the extent and complexity of the human experiments undertaken in the years between 1933 and 1945. Following the prosecution of twenty-three high-ranking National Socialist physicians and medical administrators for war crimes and crimes against humanity in the Nuremberg Medical Trial (United States v. Karl Brandt et al.), scholars have rightly focused attention on the nightmarish researches conducted by a small group of investigators on concentration camp inmates. Less well known are alternative pathways that brought investigators to undertake human experimentation in other laboratories, settings, and nations.


Subject(s)
Chemical Warfare/history , Concentration Camps/history , Ethics, Research/history , Human Experimentation/history , War Crimes/history , World War II , Animals , Chemical Warfare Agents/history , Germany , History, 20th Century , Human Experimentation/ethics , Humans , Japan , Political Systems/history , United States
18.
Account Res ; 10(1): 1-16, 2003.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-14552298

ABSTRACT

Experimentation involving children is not a new phenomenon. Children have been used as research subjects in a diverse set of experiments, including the trials of new vaccines and sera, in efforts to understand normal pediatric anatomy and physiology and in the development of new drugs and procedures. Concern about child participants in research is also not a new development. For more than a century, critics of medical research have called attention to the fact that children and other vulnerable populations--pregnant women, prisoners, the mentally ill--have too often served as the unwitting and unwilling subjects of medical experiments. This paper looks at several early cases in which children participated, including the first trial of cowpox vaccine, the first human trial of rabies vaccine, and the first treatment of Listerian wound antisepsis. The history of concern for children, especially institutionalized children, in medical research is considered along with the development of regulations or guidelines, including the Declaration of Helsinki (1964).


Subject(s)
Child , Human Experimentation/ethics , Human Experimentation/history , Ethics, Research , Europe , Helsinki Declaration , History, 18th Century , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , Humans , Internationality , Scientific Misconduct , United States
19.
Kennedy Inst Ethics J ; 6(3): 223-37, 1996 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11653394

ABSTRACT

President Clinton's charge to the Advisory Committee on Human Radiation Experiments included the identification of ethical and legal standards for evaluating government-sponsored radiation experiments conducted during the Cold War. In this paper, we review the traditional account of the history of American research ethics, and then highlight and explain the significance of a number of the Committee's historical findings as they relate to this account. These findings include both the national defense establishment's struggles with legal and insurance issues concerning human experiments, and the medical profession's perspective on human experimentation in the years following the Nuremberg Medical Trials. We conclude that the Committee's work both enriches the traditional view of the history of research ethics and opens important new areas for study.


Subject(s)
Advisory Committees , American Medical Association , Federal Government , Government , History , Human Experimentation , Public Policy , Radiation , Reference Standards , Bioethics , Codes of Ethics , Consent Forms , Ethical Review , Ethics , Ethics, Professional , Government Regulation , History, 20th Century , Humans , Informed Consent , Jurisprudence , Medical Records , Military Personnel , Moral Obligations , Nontherapeutic Human Experimentation , Organizational Policy , Patient Selection , Patients , Physicians , Records , Research Personnel , Research Subjects , Scientific Misconduct , Social Control, Formal , Social Responsibility , United States , Volunteers
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