News Briefs

‘Sorry Isn’t Enough’ after U.S. STD Study on Guatemalans Comes to Light

Posted: Saturday, October 02, 2010 - By Alex Leff
U.S. apologized to Guatemala for infecting hundreds in the 1940s with venereal diseases to test penicillin.
Alvaro Colom

Guatemalan President Alvaro Colom speaks on the phone with U.S. President Barack Obama Friday. The United States formally apologized to Guatemala for a 1940s U.S.-sponsored health study that infected hundreds of Guatemalans with venereal diseases. EFE/Presidency of Guatemala

Guatemalans expressed alarm this weekend following the revelation that over 60 years ago a U.S. public health official led a study during which hundreds in that Central American country were deliberately infected with venereal diseases.

“The Guatemalan government strongly condemns such actions and deeply deplores that these experiments were carried out on innocent people,” said the Foreign Ministry in a statement. “At the same time, we request from the U.S. authorities an exhaustive investigation into the conditions in which the study was conducted and the consequences it produced.”

Nery Rodenas, head of the Guatemalan Archbishop’s Human Rights Office, said the United States “used Guatemalans as laboratory rats,” according to press reports out of Guatemala City.

Barack Obama

President Barack Obama speaks with Guatemalan President Alvaro Colom Friday. Pete Souza/White House

The study was brought to light by a professor at Wellesley College, in Wellesley, Massachusetts, who uncovered documents detailing a 1940s U.S.-funded study of sexually transmitted diseases in which Guatemalan prisoners and mentally ill patients were intentionally infected with and then treated for syphilis. The study, led by Dr. John Culter, was funded by a grant from the U.S. National Institute of Health to the Pan-American Sanitary Bureau, now the Pan American Health Organization. Dr. Cutler was researching the use of penicillin to treat venereal diseases.

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton on Friday made a formal apology to the Guatemalan people. “The study is a sad reminder that adequate human subject safeguards did not exist a half-century ago,” she said in a statement. “Today, the regulations that govern U.S.-funded human medical research prohibit these kinds of appalling violations.”

“Sorry isn’t enough; we need compensation,” Zury Ríos, a Guatemalan lawmaker, told wire service AFP, adding that the country could use assistance now with a better reproductive health program.

It is not clear whether any of the Guatemalans who participated in the experiment – either willingly or as unknowing victims – are alive today.

The Tico Times contacted Wellesley College professor Susan Reverby, who found the documents buried in the archives of the University of Pittsburgh. She said the papers include a list of Guatemalan patient records with names. However, she added, the list of names, especially regarding the patients taken from an asylum, “were a bit uncertain.”

Reverby said the U.S. government has moved the papers from the University of Pittsburgh to the U.S. National Archives, where the Institute of Medicine might investigate the matter further.

Tim Rogers contributed to this report.

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Comments

Perhaps in another 60 years there will be an apology from the world government to all of Central America, and all of South America, and all of North America - for the genetically engineered crops, the ones capable of withstanding the pesticides engineered by the same companies, the pesticides that get sprayed over towns and cities to keep the bugs off the gen-engineered crops (corn, wheat, all that is global and required by us), and that will damage not only the non-engineered crops, but also the people in these towns and in these cities. That will make us sick, and make us sicker as we have no choice but to live under a shower. The rain will wash it away, and return it deep below the ground, once again. Do we need to endure it, and not cease it now? Making safe things required by businesses and humans is not enough? It is not to create food from nothing. It is to force the market to buy the products that are forced over what is natural. It cannot last because those required to buy this product will get sick and die from it.

What do Basf and Monsanto have in common?
What does LBAM spraying in California have to do with it?
Who made Agent Orange in the 60s?

Control the food of the world, the water of the world, the movement of those on the world - to ensure that your business earns a profit. Short term gain is no gain at all. It only ensures that you will bury your market under something you can never find again.

What does Basf have to do with Dole? What do tests on humans, with chemicals, have to do with any of this.

Thanks for the apology to the Guatemalans. Now apologize to all of us for feeding the things that make us sick, and using the excuse it will make us better while doing it.

It is clay and it is earth.
A drawing of light is not light. It is a piece of paper that wilts and decays and returns to the earth. This is where all of those drawings and images are going. To clay. And miles under this clay, are the stones we walk upon, and that can not be sold, because they are only the color of earth.

Why are you permitting this when you can stop this for all of us, including yourself and the people you love, the only thing, when it comes time to leave this place, that you will be able to look upon to remember who you are.

Take it easy. It was this for this alone. It will be public knowledge soon enough.
just give them us taxpayers money and everyone will be happy

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