Title: Results of Death Camp Experiments: Should They Be Used?????
1Results of Death Camp ExperimentsShould They
Be Used?????
2Background Information
- Nazi doctors conducted as many as 30 different
types of experiments of concentration camp
inmates. - They did these without consent of the victims who
suffered indescribable pain, mutilation,
permanent disability, or in the case of
manydeath.
3Experiments
- High Altitude
- Freezing
- Sulfanilamide
- Twins
- Poison
- Tuberculosis
- Phosgene
- Bone, Muscle, Joint Transplants
- Seawater
4High Altitude
- In 1942, Sigmund Rascher and others conducted
high-altitude experiments on prisoners at Dachau.
Eager to find out how best to save German pilots
forced to eject at high altitude, they placed
inmates into low-pressure chambers that simulated
altitudes as high as 68,000 feet and monitored
their physiological response as they succumbed
and died. Rascher was said to dissect victims'
brains while they were still alive to show that
high-altitude sickness resulted from the
formation of tiny air bubbles in the blood
vessels of a certain part of the brain. Of 200
people subjected to these experiments, 80 died
outright and the remainder were executed.
5Freezing
- To determine the most effective means for
treating German pilots who had become severely
chilled from ejecting into the ocean, or German
soldiers who suffered extreme exposure on the
Russian front, Rascher and others conducted
freezing experiments at Dachau. For up to five
hours at a time, they placed victims into vats of
icy water, either in aviator suits or naked they
took others outside in the freezing cold and
strapped them down naked. As the victims writhed
in pain, foamed at the mouth, and lost
consciousness, the doctors measured changes in
the patients' heart rate, body temperature,
muscle reflexes, and other factors. When a
prisoner's internal body temperature fell to
79.7F, the doctors tried rewarming him using hot
sleeping bags, and scalding baths. Some 80 to 100
patients perished during these experiments
6Sulfanilamide
- For the benefit of the German Army, whose
frontline soldiers suffered greatly from gas
gangrene, a type of progressive gangrene, doctors
at the Ravensbruck concentration camp performed
studies to test the effectiveness of
sulfanilamide and other drugs in curbing such
infections. They inflicted battlefield-like
wounds in victims, then infected the wounds with
bacteria such as streptococcus, tetanus, and gas
gangrene. The doctors aggravated the resulting
infection by rubbing ground glass and wood
shavings into the wound, and they tied off blood
vessels on either side of the injury to simulate
what would happen to an actual war wound. Victims
suffered intense agony and serious injury, and
some of them died as a result.
7Twins
- In an effort to find ways to more effectively
multiply the German race, Dr. Josef Mengele
performed experiments on twins at Auschwitz in
hopes of plumbing the secrets of multiple births.
After taking all the body measurements and other
living data he could from selected twins, Mengele
and his collaborators dispatched them with a
single injection of chloroform to the heart. Of
about 1,000 pairs of twins experimented upon,
only about 200 pairs survived.
8Poison
- Researchers at Buchenwald concentration camp
developed a method of individual execution by
injecting Russian prisoners with phenol and
cyanide. Experimenters also tested various
poisons on the human body by secreting noxious
chemicals in prisoners' food or shooting inmates
with poison bullets. Victims who did not die
during these experiments were killed to allow the
experimenters to perform autopsies
9Tuberculosis
- To determine if people had any natural immunities
to tuberculosis, and to develop a vaccine against
the disease, Dr. Kurt Heissmeyer injected live
tubercle bacilli (bacteria that are a major cause
of TB) into the lungs of inmates at the
Neuengamme concentration camp. About 200 adult
subjects died, and Heissmeyer had 20 children
from Auschwitz hung in an effort to hide evidence
of the experiments from approaching Allied forces.
10Phosgene
- In an attempt to find an antidote to phosgene, a
toxic gas used as a weapon during World War I,
Nazi doctors exposed 52 concentration-camp
prisoners to the gas at Fort Ney near Strasbourg,
France. Phosgene gas causes extreme irritation to
the lungs. Many of the prisoners, who according
to German records were already weak and
malnourished, suffered pulmonary edema after
exposure, and four of them died from the
experiments.
11Bone, Muscle, and Joint Transplantation
- To learn if a limb or joint from one person could
be successfully attached to another who had lost
that limb or joint, experimenters at Ravensbruck
amputated legs and shoulders from inmates in
useless attempts to transplant them onto other
victims. They also removed sections of bones,
muscles, and nerves from prisoners to study
regeneration of these body parts. Victims
suffered excruciating pain, mutilation, and
permanent disability as a result.
12Seawater
- Dr. Hans Eppinger and others at Dachau conducted
experiments on how to make seawater drinkable.
The doctors forced roughly 90 Gypsies to drink
only seawater while also depriving them of food.
The Gypsies became so dehydrated that they
reportedly licked floors after they had been
mopped just to get a drop of fresh water. The
experiments caused enormous pain and suffering
and resulted in serious bodily injury.
NEXT SLIDE
13- Few today would disagree about denouncing the
Nazi experimenters as barbaric and their
experiments as little more than sadistic torture
executed under the guise of science. - As such, many feel that findings from those
studies should never be published or used.
However, some of the research resulted in data
that potentially could save lives today. - Nazi hypothermia studies, for instance, have been
cited in the medical literature for decades, and
recently several scientists have sought to use
the data in their own work.
14- You will be asked the following question eight
times "Based on what you now know, do you think
doctors and scientists should be able to use data
from Nazi death-camp experiments?" - Each time, you must answer Yes or No to that
question, and each time you will get a different
counterargument meant to challenge your decision.
- Before answering the question for the eighth and
final time, you may elect to read all 14
counterargumentsseven for and seven against
using the data.
15- "Based on what you now know, do you think doctors
and scientists should be able to use data from
Nazi death-camp experiments?" - YES NO
16- What if you knew that the medical competence
of the Nazi doctors has been questioned?The
Hippocratic Oath, penned by the father of
medicine and held by medical professionals as a
sacred tenet to this day, states in part "I will
use treatment to help the sick according to my
ability and judgment, but never with a view to
injury and wrongdoing...." The Nazi experimenters
not only violated the oath in the foulest way,
causing them to relinquish forever all rights to
be considered doctors, but their expertise has
been called into question, even by their own
countrymen in their own day. - YES NO Counterarguments
17Counter 1A
- "Of course I am a doctor and I want to preserve
life. And out of respect for human life, I would
remove a gangrenous appendix from a diseased
body. The Jew is the gangrenous appendix in the
body of mankind." -
- Dr. Fritz Klein, Nazi physician, responding to a
concentration-camp inmate who asked, while
pointing to smoking chimneys in the distance,
"How can you reconcile that with your
Hippocratic oath as a doctor?"
NEXT SLIDE
18Counter 1B
- "I wouldn't trust the man who produced the data
from the Nazi experiments how can you trust a
man who would do that?" - Seymour Siegel, Executive Director of the U.S.
Holocaust Memorial Council - "Their actions were clear, direct violations of
both the Hippocratic Oath as well as the public's
belief that doctors always look after their
patients' well-being." - Lauren Howell, in "Nazi Medical Experiments
Murder or Research?" - NEXT SLIDE
19Counter 1C
CHOICE
- "One characteristic feature of Heissmeyer's
experiment is his extraordinary lack of concern,
add this to his gross and total ignorance in the
field of immunology, in particular bacteriology.
He did not then, nor does he now, possess the
necessary expertise demanded in a specialist on
TB diseases ... He does not own any modern
bacteriology textbook. He is also not familiar
with the various work methods of bacteriology ...
According to his own admission, Heissmeyer was
not concerned about curing the prisoners who were
put at his disposal. Nor did he believe that his
experiments would produce therapeutic results,
and he actually counted on there being
detrimental, indeed fatal, outcomes to the
prisoners." - Dr. Otto Prokop, Germany's forensic authority,
on the competence of Dr. Kurt Heissmeyer.
Heissmeyer conducted tuberculosis experiments on
20 Jewish children from Auschwitz whom he later
had hung so they could not bear witness.
20 What if you knew that many in the medical and
scientific communities consider the Nazi
experiments bad science?
- Those who judge the Nazi experiments poor science
cite several reasons. First, drawn as they were
from the death camps, experimentees were usually
malnourished, emaciated, and severely weakened,
and thus their physiological responses to the
experiments would likely be different from those
of normal, healthy people. Second, Nazi doctors
had political aspirations and sought results that
supported Nazi racial theories. Third, the data
were never replicated and, in an ethical world,
can never be replicated. Finally, soaked with the
blood of their victims, the experiments were
morally tainted, which renders them
scientifically invalid. For these reasons, many
dismiss the experiments as pseudoscience.
To test how to treat phosphorus burns, a mixture
of phosphorus and rubber to inmates' skin,
ignited it, and let it burn for 20 seconds
YES NO
Counterargument
21Counter 2A
- "The experiments were a ghostly failure as well
as a hideous crime ... They revealed nothing
which civilized medicine could use." -
- Brigadier General Telford Taylor, chief counsel
for the prosecution at Nuremberg "Doctors Trial,"
1946-47 - "Injecting a half-starved young girl with phenol
to see how quickly she will die or trying out
various forms of phosgene gas on camp inmates in
the hope of finding cheap, clean, and efficient
modes of killing so the state can effectively
prosecute genocide is not the sort of activity
associated with the term research." -
- Dr. Arthur Caplan, bioethicist now at the
University of Pennsylvania -
NEXT SLIDE
22Counter 2B
- "I don't see how any credence can be given to the
work of unethical investigators. Given the source
of the information and the way in which it was
obtained, how can anyone believe it? How can
anyone want to believe it?" -
- Dr. Arnold S. Relman, editor of the New England
Journal of Medicine, on the Nazi hypothermia work
NEXT SLIDE
23Counter 2C
CHOICE
- "The Dachau hypothermia experiments were
conducted without an orderly experimental
protocol and with inadequate methods and an
erratic execution. ... There is also evidence of
data falsification and suggestions of
fabrication. Many conclusions are not supported
by the facts presented. The flawed science is
compounded by evidence that the director of the
project showed a consistent pattern of dishonesty
and deception in his professional as well as his
personal life, thereby stripping the study of the
last vestige of credibility. On analysis, the
Dachau hypothermia study has all the ingredients
of a scientific fraud, and rejection of the data
on purely scientific grounds is inevitable." -
- Dr. Robert L. Berger, New England Deaconness
Hospital and Harvard Medical School -
24 What if using the Nazi data could set a
dangerous precedent, sanctioning unethical human
experiments and possibly encouraging similarly
deplorable acts?
- A brief review of history indicates that the evil
perpetrated by the Nazi doctors is one of degree,
not of type. White South African physicians
falsified medical reports of blacks tortured or
killed in prison. From the mid-1950s to the early
1970s, New York University researchers infected
mentally retarded children with hepatitis in
order to track the course of the disease and
search for a cure. In 1963, doctors at the Jewish
Chronic Disease Hospital in Brooklyn, New York,
injected 'live' cancer cells into 22 chronically
ill and debilitated patients they did not inform
the patients that they were participating in an
experiment completely unrelated to treatment of
the disease for which they were hospitalized.
These cases may not be as heinous as the Nazi
experiments, but if researchers cite and use
results from the latter, might that not give
tacit encouragement to further unethical studies
using human beings?
Counterarguments
YES NO
25Counterargument 3A
- "Using information from the death camps might
be seen as sanctioning the use of results from
current unethical research and thus encourage
more of it." - Marcia Angell, M.D. 9
- "Doctors in general, it would seem, can all too
readily take part in the efforts of fanatical,
demagogic, or surreptitious groups to control
matters of thought and feeling, and of living and
dying." - Robert Jay Lifton, author of The Nazi Doctors
Medical Killing and the Psychology of Genocide,
after listing numerous instances of cases in
which doctors throughout the world have conducted
evil acts in the name of nationalism or racism
10
NEXT SLIDE
26Counter 3B
CHOICE
- "To declare the use of the Nazi data ethical, as
some of the American scientists and doctors
advocate, would open a Pandora's box and could
become an excuse for any of the Ayatollahs,
Kadafis, Stroessners, and Mengeles of the world
to create similar circumstances whereby anyone
could be used as their guinea pig." - Eva Mozes Kor, survivor of Dr. Josef Mengele's
twins experiments at Auschwitz 11 - "While using such data could save lives in some
situations ... in a much larger context it could
lead to a way of thinking that would condone
taking some lives in order to save others." - A reporter paraphrasing comments made by Dr.
Judith Bellin, an Environmental Protection Agency
toxicologist, about using data from Nazi phosgene
experiments 12
27What if you knew that many feel that using the
data would make us the Nazi experimenters' moral
accessories?
- Many hold that making use of the data wrenched so
brutally from helpless victims would not only
validate the Nazi doctors' unthinkable acts, but
also make us the victims' "retrospective
torturers" and them our "retrospective guinea
pigs" . Indeed, Lord Immanuel Jakobovits, Chief
Rabbi of the British Commonwealth of Nations and
an expert in Jewish medical ethics, felt use
would only serve to further dishonor the victims
while the late Harvard Medical School professor
Dr. Henry Beecher believed publishing unethically
obtained medical data would cause a "far-reaching
moral loss to medicine."
Rudolf Brandt, an SS officer and aide to Himmler,
was found guilty of a host of war crimes,
including conducting medical experimentation and
killing tuberculosis-infected people. Sentenced
to death, he was hanged on June 2, 1948
Counterarguments
YES NO
28Counter 4A
- "The idea behind the negative reaction now is
that the Nazis were criminals we are decent.
That's not true. What we've done is not as evil,
but it's in the ballpark." - Dr. Arthur Caplan, bioethicist now at the
University of Pennsylvania, commenting about
uproar surrounding physiologist Robert Pozos'
proposed use of Nazi data on hypothermia - "The conduct of Nazi physician-scientists was
barbarous, revolting, monstrous, devoid of any
decency. Their research defiled human beings,
medicine, science, and humanity. They dragged
through bloody mud an honorable profession to
which contemporary physician-scientists who now
wish to make use of these results belong." - Jay Katz, M.D., Yale University School of Law
NEXT SLIDE
29Counter 4 B
CHOICE
- "Today some doctors want to use the only thing
left by these victims. They are like vultures
waiting for the corpses to cool so they could
devour every consummable part. To use the Nazi
data is obscene and sick. One can always
rationalize that it would save human lives the
question should be asked, at what cost?" -
- Eva Mozes Kor, survivor of Dr. Josef Mengele's
twins experiments at Auschwitz - "We must not add our numbers to the multitudes
of onlookers who slept peacefully through the
nights of anguished cries while dreaming their
sweet dreams of a better tomorrow." -
- Dr. Willard Gaylin, psychiatrist and former
president of The Hastings Center, a biomedical
ethics thinktank
30What if you knew that many survivors of the Nazi
experiments feel strongly that the data should
never be used?
- Among the small minority of those experimented
upon who survived to bring shocking details of
the atrocities to the outside world are a vocal
group who would consign the data to oblivion.
Many make the same arguments that modern doctors
and scientists opposed to the data's use make,
namely, that using the information would
legitimize the Nazi experimenters and their
damnable undertakings, make us moral accomplices,
further demean the victims, etc. Responses from
survivors asked whether the data should be used
ranged from the calm and reasoned to the
incredulous "No! No! No! I (we) suffered, and it
is no 'medical data' or 'information'
whatsoever!!!"
YES NO
Counterarguments
31Counter 5A
- "As much as I am for scientific research for the
betterment of humanity, I do feel that the
scientific data collected from experiments done
on inmates of Nazi concentration camps should not
be used. If I would agree, I feel I would give
a stamp of approval to the ways and means these
experiments have been conducted and
quasi-legalize them." - Anonymous survivor of Dr. Josef Mengele's twins
experiments at Auschwitz
NEXT SLIDE
32Counter 5B
- "The scientist who reuses these data aligns
himself with the values and methods of the Nazi
scientists/doctors by extending their work into
contemporary research, thereby giving it
credibility and sanction. He too is saying first
and foremost, 'for the sake of science' and for
the sake of 'progress,' ignoring the case for
humanity." - Sara Vigorito, survivor of Mengele's twins
experiments at Auschwitz. Just three years old
when she arrived, Vigorito spent a year in a
wooden cage a yard and a half wide with her twin
sister, who died from repeated injections to her
spinal column
NEXT SLIDE
33Counter 5 C
- "In the case of the Mengele Twins, copies of the
data should be given to those twins who are still
alive. The data of the victims who are dead
should be shredded and placed in a transparent
monument, as evidence that they exist but cannot
be used. It should be a lesson to the world that
human dignity and human life are more important
than any advance in science and medicine." - Eva Mozes Kor, survivor of Dr. Josef Mengele's
twins experiments at Auschwitz
NEXT SLIDE
34Counter 5 D
CHOICE
- "I consider it inexcusable to dignify those
murderers with the word 'scientist' or dignify
what they did with the word 'research' ... The
data should be thrown to the winds and
forgotten." -
- Gisela Konopka, concentration-camp survivor
35What if you knew just how much victims of the
experiments suffered?
- "One cannot fully confront the dilemma of using
the results of Nazi experiments," the attorney
and ethicist Baruch Cohen has written, "without
sensitizing one's self to the images of the
frozen, the injected, the inseminated, and the
sterilized." 26 One could add without
sensitizing oneself to eyewitness testimony.
Obviously, the hundreds who died at the hands of
Nazi death-camp doctors cannot tell their story
of unfathomable fear, unbearable pain, and
senseless death. One must rely on those who
survived and those who witnessed the execrable
atrocities that occurred in the concentration
camps. Here is some of that testimony
prisoner during low-pressure experimentation at
Dachau, 1942.
YES NO
Counterarguments
36Counter 6A
- "The third experiment ... took such an
extraordinary course that I called an SS
physician of the camp as witness, since I had
worked on these experiments all by myself. It was
a continuous experiment without oxygen at a
simulated height of 12 kilometers 39,283 feet
conducted on a 37-year-old Jew in good general
condition. Breathing continued up to 30 minutes.
After four minutes the experimental subject began
to perspire and wiggle his head, after five
minutes cramps occurred, between six and ten
minutes breathing increased in speed and the
experimental subject became unconscious from 11
to 30 minutes breathing slowed down to three
breaths per minute, finally stopping altogether."
- From a report by Dr. Sigmund Rascher to Heinrich
Himmler dated April 5, 1942 concerning his
high-altitude experiments on prisoners at Dachau
concentration camp
NEXT SLIDE
37Counter 6 B
CHOICE
- "It was the worst experiment ever made. Two
Russian officers were brought from the prison
barracks. Rascher had them stripped and they had
to go into the vat naked. Hour after hour went
by, and whereas usually unconsciousness from the
cold set in after 60 minutes at the latest, the
two men in this case still responded fully after
two and a half hours. All appeals to Rascher to
put them to sleep by injection were fruitless.
After the third hour one of the Russians said to
the other, 'Comrade, please tell the officer to
shoot us.' The other replied that he expected no
mercy from this Fascist dog. The two shook hands
with a 'Farewell, Comrade' ... These words were
translated to Rascher by a young Pole, though in
a somewhat different form. Rascher went to his
office. The young Pole at once tried to
chloroform the two victims, but Rascher came back
at once, threatening us with his gun ... The test
lasted at least five hours before death
supervened." - Testimony given at the "Doctors Trial" at
Nuremberg by Walter Neff, an Auschwitz prisoner
who served as Dr. Sigmund Rascher's medical
orderly during hypothermia experiments
38Click HERE for the final question
39What if the Nazi experiments had been conducted
on your mother, your brother, your child?
- "I offer this challenge to the hypothermia
researchers. As you page through the research,
have next to it actual photos of Jews being
tortured in the name of research and see how long
you are able to analyze data. Better yet, think
of your mother or father floating in that tank
and see if your beliefs about this subject hold
up."
Nazi doctors immerse a prisoner in ice water
during hypothermia experiments at Dachau.
Make your decision
40Click On Your Final Decision
41What if you knew that not publishing and/or using
the data could strengthen the arguments of those
who say the Holocaust never happened?
- So-called Holocaust deniers maintain that the
Holocaust itself never took place. Many who find
such arguments absurd and detestable feel that
failing to cite or use the Nazi data might only
fan the flames of Holocaust denial. As such, most
scholars, whether or not they advocate using the
Nazi data, hold that the fact that the
experiments happened should never be forgotten,
lest such atrocities recur. Thus, Dr. Jay Katz of
Yale Law School, who opposes use, would publish
the data in full detail, then condemn them to
oblivion 31, while Ronald Banner of the Jewish
Ethical Medical Study Group in Philadelphia, who
does not oppose citation of the data,
nevertheless feels "chagrined that someone would
refer to those experiments without mentioning
something about the way the information was
gained. It shows a lack of conscience. There are
times that something, morally, stinks so bad that
you have to hold your nose even while you refer
to it."
YES NO
Counterarguments
42Counter 1A
- It sends a chill down every normal human beings
spine to think of the horrible things the Nazis
did there, but Im separating the results and the
circumstances. Actually, if the U.S. doctor
Pozos dedicated his study to the memory of
those victims of the Nazis, it would serve as a
nice way of reminding people about the horrible
experiments. - Ephraim Zuroff, Israeli representative to the
Simon Wiesenthal Center in Los Angeles
NEXT SLIDE
43Counter 1 B
- I submit that we must put the Holocaust and the
Nazi experiments directly under the floodlights
and on center stage even if some of us and our
past and present are partly illuminated by the
glare. Instead of banning the Nazi data or
assigning it to some archivist or custodial
committee, I maintain that it be exhumed,
printed, and disseminated to every medical school
in the world along with the details of
methodology and the names of the doctors who did
it, whether or not they were indicted, acquitted,
or hanged. ... Let the students and the residents
and the young doctors know that this was not
ancient history or an episode from a horror movie
where the actors get up after filming and prepare
for another role. It was real. It happened
yesterday. ... They tried to burn the bodies and
to suppress the data. We must not finish the job
for them. - Dr. Velvl W. Greene, professor of medical ethics
at Ben Gurion University in Beersheba, Israel
NEXT SLIDE
44Counter 1 C
CHOICE
- The best argument Ive heard for preserving
the Nazi data is to keep evidence that those
experiments were carried out. As long as the data
are available, evidence that at least some people
did some bad things in Nazi Germany cannot be
denied. -
- Howard M. Spiro, M.D., Department of Internal
Medicine, Yale University
45What if you knew that such data could not be
obtained today?
- Hypothermia expert Dr. Robert Pozos had immersed
hundreds of volunteers into ice water in the
years after he founded the University of
Minnesota's Hypothermia Laboratory in 1977. (He
is no longer affiliated with the university.) But
he never let a participant's temperature drop
more than 3.6F (i.e., below 95F). Unburdened by
even the slightest sense of humanity, the Nazi
hypothermia experimenters, , on the other hand,
let their victims' interior body temperatures
drop to 79.7F before attempting to revive them.
Most died an excruciatingly painful death as a
result. However, some did revive, and the Nazis
found that rapid rewarming in hot water proved
the most effective way to revive them. In an
ethical world, such data would not exist, but
they do exist and could benefit humanity. Should
they simply be lost to science?
At the Nuremberg "Doctors Trial," Dr. Alexander
points at scars on the leg of Polish survivor who
endured sulfanilamide experiments at Ravensbruck
concentration camp.
Counterarguments
YES NO
46Counter 2 A
- "Dr. Rascher, although he wallowed in blood ...
and in obscenity ... nevertheless appears to have
settled the question of what to do for people in
shock from exposure to cold ... The final report
satisfies all the criteria of objective and
accurate observation and interpretation ... The
method of rapid and intensive rewarming in hot
water ... should be immediately adopted as the
treatment of choice by the Air-Sea Rescue
Services of the United States Armed Forces." - Maj. Leo Alexander, U.S. Army doctor who served
as aide to the chief counsel of the Nuremberg
war-crimes trial and authored an oft-cited 1945
report on the Dachau hypothermia experiments.
While Alexander later concluded the results were
undependable, other medical experts, most
recently hypothermia researchers Robert Pozos and
John Hayward, have claimed that the data are
useful NEXT SLIDE
47Counter 2 B
- "The goal of science is to produce new knowledge.
If, during unethically conducted experiments, one
valid scientific fact is produced, should that
information be used as it has been, referenced in
the literature as it has been, or just
discarded?" - Jay Katz (Yale University School of Law) and
Robert S. Pozos (hypothermia expert) - "I don't want to have to use this data, but
there is no other and will be no other in an
ethical world." - Dr. John S. Hayward, hypothermia expert at
University of Victoria University, Vancouver,
B.C., Canada, on why he used Nazi hypothermia
data in his research
NEXT SLIDE
48Counter 2 C
CHOICE
- "To justify the use of Nazi data in a research
article, I would expect scientists to use the
findings only in circumstances where the
scientific validity is clear and where there is
no alternative source of information." - Kristine Moe, journalist
49If you feel that the Nazi results are tainted
because of the way they were obtained, what if
you knew that many deem information morally
neutral?
- Many scientists might argue that while the Nazi
experiments were nothing short of bestial, their
results can only be judged scientifically, not
morally data are neither good nor bad, they are
just data. Even if scientists, journal editors,
and others were to judge results on moral
grounds, Dr. Eleanor Singer, editor of Public
Opinion Quarterly, considers it "nonsense to talk
about 'enforcing ethical standards' as though
these were clear and agreed-upon." Until the
scientific community reaches a consensus on the
degree to which ethical concerns should govern
the spread of scientific knowledge, Singer
maintains, "I would argue that open
dissemination, not censorship, affords the best
chance for developing agreed-upon principles of
what constitutes ethical research procedures, and
of how potential conflicts among ethical
principles, and between such principles and
scientific goals, are to be resolved."
YES NO
Counterarguments
50Counter 3 A
- "The most powerful argument in defense of the use
of the data gathered by unethical methods is that
the information gathered is independent of the
ethics of the methods and that the two are not
linked together. In essence, data are neither
evil nor good." - Dr. Robert Pozos, hypothermia expert
NEXT SLIDE
51Counter 3 B
- "Perhaps the most intriguing question on which
the issue of proper use turns is whether or not
scientific data can acquire a moral taint. Common
sense seems to indicate that a parcel of
information about the physical world is morally
neutral." - Brian Folker and Arthur W. Hafner
NEXT SLIDE
52Counter 3 C
CHOICE
- "We are talking of the use of the data, not
participation in these heinous studies, not
replication of atrocities. The wrongs perpetrated
were monstrous those wrongs are over and done.
How could the provenance of the data serve to
prohibit their use?" - The late Dr. Benjamin Freedman, formerly a
bioethicist at McGill University in Montreal
53What if you knew that the data might help save
lives today?
- Hypothermia expert Robert Pozos believes Nazi
data on rapid rewarming could save lives, while
Dr. John Hayward, also a specialist in
hypothermia, has used Nazi cooling curves to
determine how long cold-water survival suits
would safeguard people at near-fatal
temperatures. As journalist Kristine Moe has
pointed out, scientists and physicians have
gained valuable insights from other horrific
events in history. Jewish doctors locked inside
the Warsaw Ghetto took copious clinical notes on
how their compatriots, many of them children,
perished from starvation smuggled out of the
ghetto, those notes were later published as a
landmark study on hunger disease. Survivors of
the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki
offered a valuable, albeit tragic, opportunity
for specialists to learn more about radiation
sickness. With human lives at stake, should we
consider the Nazi data any differently?
Detailed notes kept by Jewish doctors on children
and adults who starved to death in the Warsaw
ghetto were later published as a seminal study on
hunger disease.
Counterarguments
YES NO
54Counter 4 A
- "The argument that the information from the
Dachau hypothermia experiments could be used to
save human lives is a powerful one...." - Dr. Robert Pozos, hypothermia expert
- "I'm trying to make something constructive out
of it. I use it with my guard up, but it's
useful." - Dr. John S. Hayward, hypothermia expert at
University of Victoria University, Vancouver,
B.C., Canada, on why he used Nazi hypothermia
data in his research
NEXT SLIDE
55Counter 4 B
CHOICE
- "We won't argue that the experiments were well
reported or well designed, but compared to what
we had, they offered a measure of improvement.
They obviously had a lot of flaws. But we felt
compelled to use it because it provided
dose-response data." - John Vandenberg, EPA project manager in charge
of regulatory review of phosgene gas, on why he
condoned citing data from the Nazi phosgene
experiments
56If the data have a chance to benefit people
today, are we not morally obligated to use them?
- The United States produces about one billion
pounds of phosgene gas a year for use in
manufacturing plastics and pesticides. Yet
phosgene causes lung irritation and fluid
build-up and can making breathing difficult if
not impossible. To assess the risks to factory
workers and those living nearby, the
Environmental Protection Agency thought of using
Nazi data on phosgene-gas experiments, but
decided it was immoral. As one writer commented,
"Is it fair to those people currently being
exposed to the chemical to pretend that
applicable data do not exist? Can the ethical
questions be so compelling that we ignore
information that might conceivably reduce the
amount of human suffering and misery currently
being experienced?"
YES NO
Counterarguments
57Counter 5 A
- "We cannot imply any approval of the methods.
Nor, however, should we let the inhumanity of the
experiments blind us to the possibility that some
good may be salvaged from the ashes." - Kristine Moe, journalist
- "Perhaps justice would ultimately be served if we
were to allow life to emerge from the Nazi
murders." - Baruch Cohen, attorney and ethicist
NEXT SLIDE
58Counter 5 B
CHOICE
- "As a child of survivors of the Holocaust, I have
strong empathy for those opposed to the data's
use. Nevertheless, as a physician who deals with
children and has seen them comatose, brain
damaged, and dead from hypothermia, my sense is
that to save one child through the use of this
information is worthwhile." - Anonymous medical doctor
59What if you knew that many survivors of the
medical experiments feel that the data should be
used?
- The first three opinions given below come from
survivors of Dr. Josef Mengele's twins
experiments at Auschwitz. Dr. Nancy L. Segal, a
psychologist, quoted the survivors in her article
"Twin Research at Auschwitz-Birkenau
Implications for the Use of Nazi Data Today."
YES NO
Counterarguments
60Counter 6 A
CHOICE
- "If these experiments will be of any help to
humanity, then I am in favor of them being used
as needed.""I think that the data collected in
experiments conducted on us should by all means
be used, since there were a variety of methods
used, and I am certain that the data can be very
beneficial to today's doctor.""It appears that,
at least in some cases, there was an attempt to
induce illness by injecting bacteria and then an
attempt to cure these illnesses, that is to say,
we served as laboratory animals in the hands of
the criminal, Mengele, and this type of research
should of course be made available to the
world.""I wore a number in Dachau. I have two
Belgian friends who went through the procedures
of Dr. Rascher ... I see no reason why the
results obtained should not be used for further
research." - Unnamed concentration-camp survivor
61Might not using the data lend a belated dignity
to the victims, so that their lives were not lost
for nothing?
- "Of course, nobody in their right mind condones
the experiment. The question is, Given that this
fiendish thing was done, what do you do with the
information that exists. ... I suspect that the
prisoners would have wanted to have the
information used to help somebody." - Todd Thorslund, vice president of ICF-Clement,
an environmental consulting company that wrote a
risk-assessment report for the Environmental
Protection Agency that cited Nazi phosgene
experiments - "The suffering is donelet someone benefit from
all the pain." - Lucien A. Ballin, member of a military
intelligence assault force that helped unearth
Nazi medical-experiments data in 1945
A Dachau prisoner during a high-altitude experiment.
Final Decision