Testing Drugs on India's Poor
theodp writes to tell us Wired is reporting that a lot of medical research firms are using India's poor as a hot test bed. From the article: "The sudden influx of drug companies to India resembles the gold rush frontier, according to Sean Philpott, managing editor of The American Journal of Bioethics. 'Not only are research costs low, but there is a skilled work force to conduct the trials'"
It's more than close to true. Remember their letter to Arafat:
PETA: Leave the Animals in Peace
http://www.peta.org/feat/arafat/
Their descendants have now lived long enough to see (parts of it) repeated.
Y'know, I've never been ashamed of my American citizenship until now. This is wrong on the face of it - no need for protracted debate to see that this is another example of the strong using the weak for their (our) own ends.
I was almost able to ignore our (USA's) past arrogance, our willingness to utilize political and military pressure to inappropriately enforce our will on others; but this is seriously over the top. Human experimentation? Paging Doctor Mengele.
In closing, somebody please tell me that these are multinational corporations, not USA-based?
(the silence was thunderous in its intensity)
And drugs are created primarily for rich white Americans right?
Since when has this country used intellectual elite as a pejorative term?
The good things about using the poor for drug testing are;
1) There are lots of them
2) You don't have to pay them much
3) They have all sorts of illnesses to treat
4) No one will miss them
Imagine if someone came to him one day and said "Mobeen, some Americans have decided that you were being exploited. So, to save you from exploitation, you're going to have to be unemployed from now on.". Something tells me that would make as much sense to him as "We had to destroy the village in order to save it".
"I think I can do without those drugs. Even if not using them shortens my life."
You go ahead, jerk. The rest of humanity will keep progressing. I don't want to die. I'm young, and there is a real chance that ageing will be cured in my lifetime. The more research the better. If the test subjects are well informed, there is nothing morally wrong with this.
While this sort of thing may seem bad when you think small, try thinking big--the products of research stick with humanity FOREVER.
A slashdotter who didn't build his own computer is like a Jedi who didn't build his own lightsaber.