Miller Franklin G
Perspect Biol Med. 2013 Autumn;56(4):548-67. doi: 10.1353/pbm.2013.0035.
During World War II, malaria research was conducted in prisons. A notable example was the experiments at Stateville Penitentiary in Illinois, in which prisoner-subjects were infected with malaria for the purpose of testing the safety and efficacy of novel anti-malaria drugs. Over time, commentators have shifted from viewing the malaria research at Stateville as a model of ethical clinical research to seeing the experiments as paradigmatic of abusive human experimentation. This essay undertakes a retrospective ethical assessment of the Stateville malaria research during the 1940s in light of basic ethical principles and the Nuremberg Code, as well as contemporary malaria research. In addition to its historical interest, this case study provides a rich context for addressing basic issues of research ethics, including the voluntariness of consent, the justification of risks, and the exploitation of vulnerable subjects.
第二次世界大战期间,疟疾研究在监狱中进行。一个显著的例子是伊利诺伊州斯泰特维尔监狱所开展的实验,在该实验中,受试囚犯被感染疟疾,目的是测试新型抗疟疾药物的安全性和有效性。随着时间的推移,评论者们已从将斯泰特维尔的疟疾研究视为伦理临床研究的典范,转变为将这些实验视为滥用人体实验的典型。本文根据基本伦理原则、《纽伦堡法典》以及当代疟疾研究,对20世纪40年代斯泰特维尔的疟疾研究进行回顾性伦理评估。除了其历史意义外,本案例研究为探讨研究伦理的基本问题提供了丰富的背景,包括同意的自愿性、风险的正当理由以及对弱势受试者的剥削。