Reviews
Offers worthwhile lessons for contemporary researchers, scholars, and policy makers... [and] makes a strong case for adopting a broad perspective in the analysis of research ethics... Besides gaining a rich picture of past scientific practices, readers will be better equipped to monitor the continuing search of 'useful bodies' in our own era.
Each chapter is a startling case study that examines the nature and degree of the state's involvement in human experimentation... With contributions by leading historians of medicine, science, and public policy, Useful Bodies will be of interest to ethicists, bioethicists and those engaged in the formulation of public health and policy.
The well-documented essays cite a rich body of sources.
This excellent volume treats human experimentation in Britain and the United States from 1920 to 1970.
Using specific examples of biomedical research in the 20th century, this collection addresses the role and treatment of the body by biomedical researchers.
These articles make a significant contribution to our understanding of the role of the state in human subjects research.
Although the chapters examine the tensions and moral ambiguities in research supported, sponsored, or performed by researchers in democratic states, the time period from which these cases are drawn makes a comparison with the research supported and performed by the Nazi government inevitable and disturbing. I highly recommend this book to those interested in the history and ethics of human experimentation.
Well-written and meticulously researched, these essays offer the historical context to understand and evaluate human experimentation.
With a refreshing lack of sensationalism, the essays offer fascinating details and perspectives on human experimentation conducted or funded by governments.
This volume is a rich, nuanced contribution to our continuing negotiation of the tensions between medical benefit, human subjects, knowledge production, and the power of the state. The case studies are often surprising and provocative. It presents an eye-opening picture of the ambiguity and moral complexity that continue to shape clinical interactions.
Book Details
Chapter 1. Making Human Bodies Useful: Historicizing Medical Experiments in the Twentieth Century
Part I: What Is a Human Experiment?
Chapter 2. Using the Population Body to Protect the National Body
Chapter 1. Making Human Bodies Useful: Historicizing Medical Experiments in the Twentieth Century
Part I: What Is a Human Experiment?
Chapter 2. Using the Population Body to Protect the National Body: Germ Warfare Tests in the United Kingom after World War II
Chapter 3. Whose Body? Which Disease? Studying Malaria while Treating Neurosyphilis
Part II: Who Experiments?
Chapter 4. Human Radiation Experiments and the Foundation of Medical Physics at the University of California, San Francisco and Berkeley, 1937–1962
Chapter 5. "I Have Been on Tenterhooks": Wartime Medical Research Council Jaundice Committee Experiments
Chapter 6. See an Atomic Blast and Spread the Word : Indoctrination at Ground Zero
Part III: Whose Body?
Chapter 7. Injecting Comatose Patients with Uranium: America's Overlapping Wars Against Communism and Cancer in the 1950's
Chapter 8. Writing Wilowbrook, Reading Willowbrook: The Recounting of a Medical Experiment