Book contents
- Frontmatter
- PART I AN INTRODUCTION TO THE HISTORY OF MEDICAL ETHICS
- PART II A CHRONOLOGY OF MEDICAL ETHICS
- PART III DISCOURSES OF MEDICAL ETHICS THROUGH THE LIFE CYCLE
- PART IV THE DISCOURSES OF RELIGION ON MEDICAL ETHICS
- PART V THE DISCOURSES OF PHILOSOPHY ON MEDICAL ETHICS
- PART VI THE DISCOURSES OF PRACTITIONERS ON MEDICAL ETHICS
- PART VII THE DISCOURSES OF BIOETHICS
- PART VIII DISCOURSES ON MEDICAL ETHICS AND SOCIETY
- Ethical and Legal Regulation of Medical Practice and Research
- B Medical Ethics, Imperialism, and the Nation-State
- 52 Colonialism, Imperialism, and the History of Latin American Medical Ethics
- 53 Japanese Doctors’ Experimentation, 1932–1945, and Medical Ethics
- 54 Medical Ethics and Nazism
- 55 Medical Ethics and Communism in the Soviet Union
- 56 Medical Ethics and Communism in Eastern Europe
- 57 The Ethics of Military Medical Research in the United States during the Cold War
- 58 Medical Ethics and the Military in South Africa during Apartheid: Judging History
- C Medical Ethics and Health Policy
- Appendix: Biographies: Who Was Who in the History of Medical Ethics
- Bibliography
- Index
57 - The Ethics of Military Medical Research in the United States during the Cold War
from B - Medical Ethics, Imperialism, and the Nation-State
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 May 2012
- Frontmatter
- PART I AN INTRODUCTION TO THE HISTORY OF MEDICAL ETHICS
- PART II A CHRONOLOGY OF MEDICAL ETHICS
- PART III DISCOURSES OF MEDICAL ETHICS THROUGH THE LIFE CYCLE
- PART IV THE DISCOURSES OF RELIGION ON MEDICAL ETHICS
- PART V THE DISCOURSES OF PHILOSOPHY ON MEDICAL ETHICS
- PART VI THE DISCOURSES OF PRACTITIONERS ON MEDICAL ETHICS
- PART VII THE DISCOURSES OF BIOETHICS
- PART VIII DISCOURSES ON MEDICAL ETHICS AND SOCIETY
- Ethical and Legal Regulation of Medical Practice and Research
- B Medical Ethics, Imperialism, and the Nation-State
- 52 Colonialism, Imperialism, and the History of Latin American Medical Ethics
- 53 Japanese Doctors’ Experimentation, 1932–1945, and Medical Ethics
- 54 Medical Ethics and Nazism
- 55 Medical Ethics and Communism in the Soviet Union
- 56 Medical Ethics and Communism in Eastern Europe
- 57 The Ethics of Military Medical Research in the United States during the Cold War
- 58 Medical Ethics and the Military in South Africa during Apartheid: Judging History
- C Medical Ethics and Health Policy
- Appendix: Biographies: Who Was Who in the History of Medical Ethics
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
INTRODUCTION: PROBLEMS AND ISSUES
The role of military establishments in human medical research is one of the least understood aspects of the history of medical ethics. Yet, experimentation involving persons in military service, whether as subjects or as officials authorizing these activities, not only carries with it vexing legal and political but ethical issues as well. The U.S. military also has made important and largely unappreciated contributions to the evolution of regulations concerning medical experiments. One of the ironies of this history is that the deliberate avoidance of the use of soldiers as experimental subjects has often led to abuses of vulnerable persons in their place (Moreno 2001). This chapter sketches this complex story, focusing mainly on certain critical events and incidents immediately preceding and during the Cold War. Medical experimentation during World War Ⅱ in Germany and Japan is considered for its influence, in the case of Germany, and relative lack of influence, in the case of Japan, on the United States’ military policies and guidelines that developed during the Cold War period. These policies and guidelines often anticipated advances in medical ethics in the civilian world. In spite of a number of shocking and unacceptable abuses, much of the conversation and conceptual apparatus that later characterized the bioethics movement that began in the 1960s took shape in the context of military medicine.
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- Chapter
- Information
- The Cambridge World History of Medical Ethics , pp. 625 - 632Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2008