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California university apologises for prisoner experiments

Published:Thursday | December 22, 2022 | 8:22 PM
A wheelchair-bound inmate wheels himself through a checkpoint at the California Medical Facility in Vacaville, California, on April 9, 2008. A prominent California medical school has apologised for conducting unethical experimental medical treatments on 2,600 incarcerated men in the 1960s and 1970s. (AP Photo/Rich Pedroncelli, File)

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — A prominent California medical school has apologised for conducting dozens of unethical medical experiments on at least 2,600 incarcerated men in the 1960s and 1970s, including putting pesticides and herbicides on the men's skin and injecting it into their veins.

Two dermatologists at the University of California, San Francisco, one of whom remains at the university, conducted the experiments on men at the California Medical Facility, a prison hospital in Vacaville that's about 50 miles northeast of San Francisco. The practice was halted in 1977.

The university's Program for Historical Reconciliation issued a report about the experiments earlier this month, writing that the doctors engaged in “questionable informed consent practices” and performed procedures on men who did not have any of the diseases or conditions that the research aimed to treat. The San Francisco Chronicle first reported the programme's findings Wednesday.

“UCSF apologises for its explicit role in the harm caused to the subjects, their families and our community by facilitating this research, and acknowledges the institution's implicit role in perpetuating unethical treatment of vulnerable and underserved populations, regardless of the legal or perceptual standards of the time,” Executive Vice Chancellor and Provost Dan Lowenstein said in a statement.

The report said further analysis is needed to determine the extent of harms caused to the prisoners as a result of the experiments and what the university should do in response.

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