“A collection of essays describing the dark medical research conducted during and after World War II, how it was brought to light, the rationalizations of those who perpetrated and benefited from it, and its implications for present day medicine and ethics.
"A fascinating and timely new book . . ." —New ScientistVol. 1, No. 1, March 2010”
— Bioethical Inquiry
“This volume looks at the dark medical research conducted during and after World War II, how it was brought to light, the rationalizations of those who perpetrated and benefited from it, and its implications for present day medicine and ethics.”
“A great deal has been written in recent years about human subject research. This book is different and invaluable. Its focus is at once historical and international, bringing together commentators and scholars from a number of countries and a variety of disciplines. Human subject research raises one of the basic moral problems of modern medicine: in trying to do research to save the lives of the sick, how do we protect those whom we must use to carry out the research? This book deals richly and directly with a history of human subject research that has had many dark moments. This book will help us remember what many would prefer to forget.”
— Daniel Callahan, Director, International Program, The Hastings Center
“By identifying and analyzing how the unethical was justified and rationalized, the authors draw moral and political lessons from this disturbing history that we have not yet really learned. —Nie Jin”
— Bao, author of Medical Ethics in China
“A great deal has been written in recent years about human subject research. This book is different and invaluable. Its focus is at once historical and international, bringing together commentators and scholars from a number of countries and a variety of disciplines. Human subject research raises one of the basic moral problems of modern medicine: in trying to do research to save the lives of the sick, how do we protect those whom we must use to carry out the research? This book deals richly and directly with a history of human subject research that has had many dark moments. This book will help us remember what many would prefer to forget.”
— Daniel Callahan, Director, International Program, The Hastings Center
“Lafleur and his coeditors have assembled a very useful group of essays looking at the abuse of medical research in wartime Japan and Germany, as well as in postwar America. . . . Recommended.”
— Choice
“A fascinating and timely new book . . . The take-home message of the 16 contributors to Dark Medicine is that a nation's books on past episodes of unethical practice should never be fully closed, and that ethical committees in science and medicine should never neglect the historical perspective of their own and other countries.”
— New Scientist
“. . . important issues are raised that should be considered by everyone who is interested in the history and ethics of medicine and medical research.August 2009”
— Charles W. Lidz, Ph.D.
“[T]his volume raises some of the most profound issues in the history of medical research. . . . important issues are raised that should be considered by everyone who is interested in the history and ethics of medicine and medical research.August 1, 2009”
— Charles W. Lidz, University of Massachusetts Medical School, Worcester
“Lafleur and his coeditors have assembled a very useful group of essays looking at the abuse of medical research in wartime Japan and Germany, as well as in postwar America. . . . Recommended.”
— Choice
“ . . . a fascinating and timely new book . . . The take-home message of the 16 contributors to Dark Medicine is that a nation's books on past episodes of unethical practice should never be fully closed, and that ethical committees in science and medicine should never neglect the historical perspective of their own and other countries.”
— New Scientist
“. . . This collection of essays lends relevance to this dark history in a way no computerized module on human subjects protection can.2008”
— Preeti N. Malani, MD, MSJ, Veterans Affairs Healthcare System Ann Arbor, UMI
“Most of the articles were noteworthy insofar as they provoked the reader to ruminate
on the underlying similarities between rationalizations. Since this is the first book of its kind, it provides a handy starting point for scholars working in bioethics and, in particular, research ethics. Each article is well documented with references, and the collection includes helpful introductory and concluding essays.Winter 2008”
— Stephen Napier, National Catholic Bioethics Center
“This set of powerful essays sheds light on medicine and its practitioners past, present and future and questions the headlong plunge of developed and developing societies into more and more aggressive technological attacks on illness to preserve life itself. It is truly worthwhile reading. ”
“. . . Framed by the belief that unethical research is not simply a problem of the past, Dark Medicine lends thoughtful historical content to the discussion of modern-day dilemmas. The result is a unique fusion of philosophy, religion, history, and bioethics.2008; 300(10)”
— John L. Zeller, MD, PhD, Contributing Editor
“'Dark Medicine: Rationalizing Unethical Medical Research' explores the mystery of how apparently upstanding citizens can engage in appalling human research experiments. . . . The book’s premise is that rationalization is at the heart of the problem. Physicians and scientists did not participate in the Nazi atrocities because of incompetence, madness or coercion; they participated because they convinced themselves that it was the right thing to do. . .August 2010”
— Norman M. Goldfarb , Managing Director of First Clinical Research LLC
“Certain books make you reconsider your views even though you really would rather not. This edited collection is one of those... It is truly worthwhile reading.2010, Volume 7”
— Bioethical Inquiry