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Medical Experts Decry Wrentham Experiment

U.S. Rep. Markey Calls for Heightened Investigation of Testing on Children

Medical experts, advocates for the retarded and a U.S. representative from Massachusetts reacted with outrage yesterday to the discovery of radiation experiments conducted on children at the Wrentham State School.

In 1961 and 1962, a Harvard Medical School assistant professor and a Harvard researcher working at Wrentham gave radioactive iodine to retarded children ages one to 11 in an attempt to determine the consequences of nuclear fallout.

A third physician with ties to the Boston University School of Medicine was also involved in the experimentation.

A task force convened by the state Department of Mental Retardation is investigating the use of students in its schools in experiments with radiation during the Cold War era.

Jim J. Enrietto, executive director of the national advocacy group Voice of the Retarded, said yesterday he has followed reports of the experiments closely.

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And Enrietto had bitter words for the researchers who in 1962 fed more than 60 retarded children doses of radioactive iodine.

"How can they do this to the most fragile and helpless population?" Enrietto asked.

Enrietto said he was particularly troubled by questions about whether the children knew that they were being given radioactive iodine.

"If they wanted to do these experiments, they must advise people of the dangers," Enrietto said. "These experiments are unconscionable, awful and a depravation of human rights."

"This is another example of preying upon persons with mental retardation in the name of whatever zealotry some government researcher wanted to engage in," he added.

U.S. Rep. Edward J. Markey (D-Mass.) also condemned the tests.

"It is absolutely shocking that the arrogance of the atomic age and the paranoia of the Cold War resulted in the designation of tiny children at the Wrentham School as 'desirable' subjects for tests related to radioactive fallout," Markey said in a written statement.

"I commend the forthright efforts of present University officials and the Department of Mental Retardation in making these terrible experiments public," Markey said.

Dr. Chris E. Stout, a 1987 Harvard Medical School fellow and a medical ethics expert, said he was "astounded" upon learning of the experiment in news reports yesterday.

"This kind of study reminds me of the Nazi experiments done during World War II," Stout said.

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