Undue Risk: Secret State Experiments on Humans by Moreno, Jonathan D. / Josephson, Paul R. Moreno, Jonathan D. / Josephson, Paul R.

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Textbook (Hardcover - REV)

  • 368pp

Textbook Information

  • ISBN-13: 9780716731429
  • Edition Description: REV
  • Edition Number: 1
  • Pub. Date: December 2000
  • Publisher: W. H. Freeman Company
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Product Details

  • Pub. Date: December 2000
  • Publisher: W. H. Freeman Company
  • Format: Textbook Hardcover, 368pp

Synopsis

In 1994, Jonathan Moreno became a senior staff member of a special commission created by President Clinton to investigate allegations of government-sponsored radiation research on unknowing citizens during the cold war. The top secret documents he helped to declassify revealed a shocking truth-- that human experimentation played an extensive role in this country's attempts to build and protect against weapons of mass destruction.

In Undue Risk, Moreno presents the first comprehensive history of the use of human subjects in atomic, biological, and chemical warfare experiments from World War II to the twenty-first century. From the courtrooms of Nuremberg to the battlefields of the Gulf War, Undue Risk explores a variety of government policies and specific cases, including plutonium injections into unwitting hospital patients, U.S. government attempts to recruit Nazi medical scientists, the subjection of soldiers to atomic blast fallout, secret LSD and mescaline studies, and the feeding of irradiated oatmeal to children. It is also the first book to go behind the scenes and reveal the government's struggle with the ethics of human experimentation and the evolution of agonizing policy choices on unfamiliar moral terrain.

As the threat of foreign and domestic terrorist attack continues to grow, the need for our country to defend itself against insidious weapons is greater than ever. Can a democracy justify using humans in potentially risky experiments in order to answer scientific questions vital to national security? Exploring the possibilities, Undue Risk highlights a program of human experimentation that is a moral model for all others, civilian andmilitary.

Publishers Weekly

Between 1949 and 1969, the U.S. Army conducted over 200 "field tests" as part of its biological warfare research program, releasing infectious bacterial agents in cities across the U.S. without informing residents of the exposed areas, Moreno reveals in this chilling, meticulously documented casebook. A professor of biomedical ethics at the University of Virginia, Moreno (Arguing Euthanasia) served on a Clinton--appointed advisory committee that blew the lid off the government's secret radiation experiments from WWII through the mid-1970s, which involved the injection of unwitting human volunteers with plutonium, uranium and other radioactive substances. His disturbing new book partly overlaps with Eileen Welsome's The Plutonium Files (Forecasts, Aug. 2), though Moreno's survey extends further--from Walter Reed's turn-of-the-century yellow fever research to the infamous Tuskegee syphilis study; from army and air force mind control experiments (1950--1975) involving ingestion of LSD and incapacitating chemicals by thousands of subjects, often without their consent, to the compulsory vaccination of Gulf War GIs with botulism toxin vaccine not approved by the FDA that may have contributed to "Gulf war syndrome." While Moreno duly excoriates the excesses and horrors, his overarching thesis is that human military experimentation is unavoidable, and he commends the army's current infectious-agent research program at Fort Detrick, Md., as a model for future "ethical" research. Some readers may welcome his coolly detached chronicle as a complement to Welsome's scathing, far more powerful expos . Agent, Betsy Amster; 3-city author tour. (Oct.) Copyright 1999 Cahners Business Information.

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Biography

Jonathan Moreno, a former senior staff member of President Clinton's Advisory Committee on Human Radiation Experiments, is Kornfeld Professor of Biomedical Ethics and Director of the Center for Biomedical Ethics at the University if Virginia. He is also Senior Research Fellow at the Kennedy Institute of Ethics at Georgetown University, a Fellow of the New York Academy of Medicine, an Adjunct Associate of the Hastings Center, and a member of the board of directors of the American Society of Law, Medicine, and Ethics. A regular bioethics columnist for abcnews.com, Moreno is the author of Deciding Together: Bioethics and Moral Consensus. He lives in Charlottesville, Virginia and Washington, D.C.

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Undue Risk: Secret State Experiments on Humansby Anonymous

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October 21, 1999: I guess I must disclose my interest in this book before I comment. I am one of the Army folks mentioned in it....and I am happy about what he says. So much has been said about military involvement in medical research programs that was not grounded in truth, but Jonathan has done the hard work of cutting through smoke screens that hide facets of the truth that others have not seen or won't talk about. Furthermore, he has breathed life into the people behind the yellowed dusty documents that chronicle this history. I like the way the book rapidly catapults the reader into the present day realities of a world focused on the 'poor man's weapon of mass destruction' before retracing the history that took place before. There has always been a theoretical concern that having programs oriented to defense against such weapons may not be worthwhile. The same critics would wonder why defensive programs weren't carried out if we had not been prepared for Iraq's chemical and biological weapons, and they were used. Besides being a very interesting book, this volume contains lots of important and efficiently presented facts about the good and bad that went into human subjects research for National Interests.