
For the Good of Mankind?
Vicki Oransky Wittenstein
(Author)Description
Experiment: A child is deliberately infected with the deadly smallpox disease without his parents' informed consent. Result: The world's first vaccine.
Experiment: A slave woman is forced to undergo more than thirty operations without anesthesia. Result: The beginnings of modern gynecology.
Incidents like these paved the way for crucial, lifesaving medical discoveries. But they also harmed and humiliated their test subjects. How do doctors balance the need to test new medicines and procedures with their ethical duty to protect the rights of humans? Take a journey through some of history's greatest medical advances--and its most horrifying medical atrocities--to discover how human suffering has gone hand in hand with medical advancement.
Product Details
Publisher | Twenty-First Century Books (Tm) |
Publish Date | August 01, 2013 |
Pages | 96 |
Language | English |
Type | |
EAN/UPC | 9781467706599 |
Dimensions | 10.4 X 7.2 X 0.5 inches | 1.0 pounds |
About the Author
Vicki Wittenstein grew up in Maplewood, N.J., and has lived in Brooklyn, N.Y. with her husband and two children for many years. She received her BA in American Civilization and Urban Studies from the University of Pennsylvania, and her JD from Cornell Law School. After prosecuting criminal cases as an Assistant District Attorney in Manhattan, she began writing articles for children's magazines, including Highlights For Children, Odyssey, and the Best of the Children's Market. She has also been an advocate for children and families. Recently, she received her MFA in Writing for Children and Young Adults from Vermont College of Fine Arts. Her first book, Planet Hunter: Geoff Marcy and the Search for Other Earths (Boyds Mills Press 2010), received the 2011 Science Communications Award from the American Institute of Physics. For The Good of Mankind?: The Shameful History of Human Medical Experimentation (Twenty-First Century Books) will be published in the fall of 2013.
Reviews
This chilling narrative exposes the history of human medical experimentation, much of which has occurred in the United States. By examining the use of humans as guinea pigs in medical research since the 1700s, Wittenstein explains the evolution of modern regulations, review boards, and organizations focused on ethical treatment of patients and approved research procedures. While the exploitation of unsuspecting orphans and pregnant women or intentionally withholding established medical cures from sick patients may seem gruesome, the narrative is successful at presenting both sides of the issue: the patient whose rights are being violated and the doctor intent on furthering science. Of particular note is the discussion of stem-cell research, which brings these historical medical controversies to light in a modern setting. The black-and-white photographs present a human face to these experiments and, if used in the classroom, this title will spark an educated debate. A 'Critical Analysis' section presents questions for readers to consider and discuss while sources for additional information list print, media, and websites that will appeal to a wide variety of readers. This title is an important addition to public and school libraries. It will pair well with books on topics ranging from medicine and history to human rights and law. --School Library Journal
-- "Journal"At less than one-hundred pages, Wittenstein's history of human medical experimentation is thinner than anticipated for such an engaging topic and intriguing cover. In five brief chapters, Wittenstein highlights human guinea pigs, inhumane Nazi experimentation, exploitation during wartime, scandals, and safeguarding humans from future mistreatment. The cases she presents are eye-opening but balanced in presentation, and portrays many of the willing serving out of a sense of nationalism rather than personal or financial gain. Yet there are just as many cases of unknowing participants, including children, the mentally disabled, or inmates, whose illnesses are disregarded as scientists use their bodies for science. Infamous cases made popular recently, like Henrietta Lacks or reports from Dr. Josef Mengele's labs, are given their due diligence in the book with provocative side notes about eugenics, stem cell research, and the Manhattan Project, albeit only briefly, with the photographs enhancing the side notes and stories alike.
With a sharpened focus on narrative nonfiction in the Common Core, Wittenstein's book will certainly find its place in the library, aptly integrating itself in both history and science with connections to ethics and the future of research, especially when using the critical analysis questions at the back. Sadly, the brevity as a whole makes it average rather than stellar, but with its format and easily understood plot, it is a solid purchase. --VOYA
More than just a historical treatment of human experimentation, this title also offers an introduction to timely related issues involving biospecimens, stem cell research, and genetic enhancement. Archival photographs of test subjects, including prison and concentration camp inmates, accompany chilling tales of torturous experimentation. How do 'respect, beneficence, and justice, ' as described in the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services' Federal Policy for the Protection of Human Subjects, and 'The Common Rule' that department published in 1991 fit with the ongoing practice of using humans as guinea pigs? Writing from a mindful, balanced perspective, Wittenstein keeps the essential ethical questions about rights of the individual, the advancement of science, and the evolution of informed consent in clear view. Chapter notes offering further critical analysis focus mainly on bioethical issues, while the source notes, a selected bibliography, lists of additional resources, and an index extend this substantive, informative resource. Researchers may find additional suggestions for further exploring the topic on the publisher's website. --Booklist
-- "Journal"Readers may think twice about going to their next doctor appointment after reading this creepy, unsettling account of human medical experimentation.
In a dramatic, engrossing narrative, Wittenstein describes many cringe-inducing examples of the ways doctors have exploited the marginalized, powerless and voiceless of society as human guinea pigs over the centuries. African-Americans, indigenous peoples, concentration-camp inmates, orphans, prisoners, the poor, the mentally ill and disabled have been subjected to injections of lethal diseases, ingestion of radioactive materials, exposure to poisons, surgical procedures and other horrors. Some experiments did lead to important discoveries and breakthroughs, but readers are challenged to consider the costs of violating individual rights for the cause of advancing medical knowledge. Drawing on a variety of sources, including contemporary newspaper articles, medical journals and, in at least one case, a personal interview, the author lays out this troubling history. She also documents the evolution of medical ethics and the establishment of procedures for things like clinical trials for new drug treatments. Sidebars offer additional information, filling in the cracks on related issues such as eugenics and thalidomide babies. Photographs, some not particularly well reproduced, illustrate the account.
A harrowing, often gruesome, exploration of some of the darkest moments in medical history. --Kirkus Reviews
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