Until the fall of the Wall, Western pharmaceutical companies
conducted drug trials in East German hospitals. More than 50,000
patients served as subjects, often without their knowledge, and many
died. The human experiments haven't been fully investigated to this day
despite fresh evidence of wrongdoing.
Virtually every major name in the pharmaceutical industry was
involved, including Bayer, Schering, Hoechst, Boehringer, Pfizer, Sandoz
and Roche. The companies administered everything produced in their
research laboratories: chemotherapy drugs, antidepressants and heart
medications, as well as other substances fresh from the laboratory, the
effects of which were still largely unknown to scientists.
Human trials are among the darker chapters of the pharmaceutical
industry's history. Medical progress has always claimed victims. But
medical research becomes particularly dangerous to patients when efforts
to benefit mankind are dominated by the quest for quick profits. When
that happens, researchers overstep limits that should never be exceeded,
jeopardizing the health and lives of subjects in the interest of
improving a company's bottom line
Today drug manufacturers depend on emerging economies like India,
China and Russia when they want to test new drugs quickly and
inexpensively. In the 1970s and 80s, though, the ideal testing ground
was conveniently nearby: in East Germany.
Starting in 1983, the Western companies were able to officially submit
their offers to a central office. During their visits to Fehrbelliner
Strasse, the pharmaceutical representatives offered the East Germans up
to 800,000 deutsche marks per study. Petzold and his comrades at the
Health Ministry drummed up the funds for their republic, raising
millions for the struggling East German economy. Like a pimp, their
government sold its sick citizens and prostituted the country as a
laboratory for the West's clinical trials.
Germany isn't nearly as far along when it comes to addressing the
pharmaceutical trials. Volker Hess, a medical historian, is finally
interviewing contemporary witnesses at Charité and wants to see the
archives completely declassified, so that researchers can identify the
perpetrators and the victims. A two- to three-year research project
would be needed, says Hess, although, as he notes, the VFA hasn't been
willing to provide any funding for the effort yet.
Time is of the essence, because of the risk of important evidence of
the human trials being lost. As part of regular housecleaning, Charité
is in the process of destroying its files from 1983. In an old warehouse
in Berlin's Tempelhof district, forklifts are currently transporting
boxes of records to be destroyed.
Full story here.
1 comment:
How many times do we hear of people being used in these sort of trials, perhaps that should read mis-used. From Eastern Europe to Africa to India and beyond , Human trials are among the darker chapters of the pharmaceutical industry's history, which of course the companies hide.
Martin
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