Article 15788 of alt.conspiracy: Newsgroups: alt.conspiracy,alt.activism,alt.society.civil-liberty,alt.individualism,alt.censorship,talk.politics.misc,misc.headlines,soc.culture.usa Path: cbnewsl!jad From: jad@cbnewsl.cb.att.com (John DiNardo) Subject: Part V, Doctors Secretly Inject Cancer Cells Into Patients Organization: AT&T Bell Laboratories Distribution: North America Date: Tue, 15 Sep 1992 15:58:55 GMT Message-ID: <1992Sep15.155855.14782@cbnewsl.cb.att.com> Followup-To: alt.conspiracy Keywords: shades of Dr. Mengele, human medical experimentation Lines: 129 I made the following transcript from a tape recording of a broadcast by Pacifica Radio station WBAI-FM (99.5) 505 Eighth Ave., 19th Fl. New York, NY 10018 (212) 279-0707 * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * (continuation) GARY NULL: When Doctor Cagan was informed a few days later that his superior had assigned the project to another doctor, Cagan replied that he was, according to his affidavit, quote: "glad to have nothing to do with it (the experiment), even if we could get such consents, which I doubted." Unquote. Well, despite the opposition of these three doctors and the obvious problem of obtaining informed consent by chronically ill patients to injections of live cancer cells, the experiment was commenced. At this time, twenty-two patients at the Jewish Chronic Disease Hospital (now remember, this was many years ago) were injected in their thighs with specially prepared suspensions of human cancer cells. By later accounts, the doctor from Sloan-Kettering who created this whole thing injected the first two or three patients as a demonstration. Then the person who was assigned to do the job did the rest. There were some conflicts as to exactly how consent had been obtained. No one seems to know. One thing is certain, however. No written consent was obtained from any patient. None. Zero. Consequently, the only proof that such consent was given at all comes from the statements of the doctors participating in the administration of the injections. And this, of course, raises quite a few questions. Did the doctors fully inform each and every patient that they were being injected with live cancer cells in an experiment TOTALLY unrelated to their normal course of therapy? And, if so, were these chronically ill patients mentally competent to understand the nature of the experiment and the risks involved? Well with Sloan-Kettering's scientist's awareness of, quote: "the phobia and ignorance that surrounds the word `cancer'" unquote, and with his admitted failure to obtain consents in previous experiments because he considered them, quote, "routine", unquote, how realistic is it to expect him to inform the chronically ill patients at the Jewish Chronic Disease Hospital that they were being injected with live cancer cells? In addition to the issue of informed consent, there was equal controversy about the secretive and surreptitious manner in which the experiment was conducted. Again, the doctor who was the head of all cancer research at the Jewish Chronic Disease Hospital was Doctor Leichter. And he was strongly opposed to the experiment. Now, under normal hospital protocol, any experiment involving cancer would have required his consent and approval. And furthermore, all the people utilized for the experiment were patients in the Blumberg Pavilion which was, at that time, and had been since 1956, under the supervision of a Doctor Rosenfeld. That's according to Doctor Rosenfeld's affidavit. Doctor Rosenfeld, who was responsible for the patients in his ward, should also, under normal protocol, have been informed of the experiments. Instead, according to the affidavit of Doctor Rosenfeld, he first learned of the experiment on his patients in his ward after the experiment was in process. When he was making his usual rounds of the Blumberg Pavilion, accompanied by another physician, quote: "A ward patient stopped me, complaining bitterly of pain. He told me that he was injected under the right thigh and that the area was now swollen. He said that he had not been sick at the time that he received the injection, and he stated further that he knew that I had not ordered anything for him." Unquote. That's according to his affidavit. Puzzled by his patient's complaints, Doctor Rosenfeld asked another physician if he could explain this matter, at which time that other physician told him that he was doing experimental injections on the orders of one of the top directors of the hospital. A few days later, Rosenfeld was approached by one of the doctors who had been approached, and who had refused to participate in the experiment. That was Doctor Cagan. Cagan told Rosenfeld about the experiment and expressed his opposition to it, as well as that of Doctors Leichter and Fersko. Well, Doctor Rosenfeld was angry, not only because he was never consulted, but also because of the violations of protocol which now appeared to be showing up in a number of situations. He said, quote: "I felt that it was my duty to inform the administration of my findings, as all new projects involving experimental drugs or agents, prior to their being used on patients, had to be approved by the research committee. This had not been done, nor had the project received the approval of Doctor David Leichter, even though this was a cancer project. In addition, it was being performed on patients for whom I am responsible in the Blumberg Pavilion, which patients had not been advised of the nature of the project, had not been told of the potential dangers, had not given their prior written consent, and had not given their oral consent. There were eighteen patients in my ward who received these injections, and many of them were mentally incapable of giving their consent. In my opinion, this project was, therefore, both illegal and immoral, and it has been conducted surreptitiously without my knowledge or consent." Unquote. That's from Doctor Rosenfeld's affidavit. By mid-August, the hospital was abuzz with rumors surrounding the experiment. [The rumbling] reached such a proportion that the executive director of the hospital, a Doctor Solomon Siegel, cut his Florida vaction short and returned immediately to New York in order to investigate the source of the uproar. Siegel talked with Rosenfeld, Leichter and Cagan separately and asked each of them separately what they knew. Each told him about the experiment and expressed their uneasiness about its taking place under the auspices of the Jewish Chronic Disease Hospital. According to Leichter, he told Siegel at that time that he felt that the project was, quote: "immoral and illegal without the written prior informed consent of each and every informed patient." Unquote. Leichter also expressed concern about the danger that cancer cell injections were being given to hospital patients, and he warned Siegel of, quote: "the tremendous damage it could do to the reputation of the hospital and to its standing in society." Unquote. (to be continued) * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * If you agree that this story deserves broad public attention, please assist in its dissemination by posting it to other bulletin boards, and by posting hardcopies in public places, both on and off campus. John DiNardo