Those particular studies "poisoned" the subjects with levels of pollution they would experience on a regular basis in urban environments on smoggy days (~5% of the time). The consent forms stated precisely that and the experimenters did not move outside those levels except in one particular individual case for a total of 6 minutes there was a 20% overexposure.
The "furor"--more generated than reality-based here--is by people who do not want research into the harm caused by what we are turning our environment into to be performed in the first place. That is a completely, utterly, 180 degree different matter from the Tuskegee experiments.
You can bet your last dollar that if the very same interests who are complaining here found that the consent forms were "corrected" to state (as maybe they should be corrected to state): "breathing the air in your community is likely to lead to X, Y, and Z conditions, they would have gigantic complaints about the EPA's going far beyond the data.
Yes, there is most definitely an ideological element here. You just have it backwards: It is an attempt to stifle research likely to come to solid conclusions conflicting with the ideology/interests of the complainers.
Anyone complaining about these studies should also be immediately acting to institute heavy controls on fossil fuel use in all areas--e.g., transportation, power generation, heating/cooling, etc.--on smoggy days to immediately reduce particulate levels. For if there is "poisoning" in the EPA labs, there is truly "poisoning" of the air in our cities.
kzt wrote:Jonathan_S wrote:It was very questionable when started and IMHO criminal before it ended. A very far cry from a modern pharmaceutical trial.
It was a government test, run by ideological "scientists" above the law. You expect reasonable and sane behavior from them? Have you seen the recent EPA tests where they poisoned kids and sick people with diesel fumes?
http://www.scribd.com/mobile/doc/215909101