Russel
Russel
Russel
Group Number: 6
From 1913 to 1951, eugenicist Leo Stanley served as San Quentin State Prison's top doctor. He started
performing vasectomies on inmates and transplanting the testicles of younger men into those who were older
because he thought that aging and decreasing hormones related to criminality, a lack of morals, and poor
physical characteristics. He had performed 10,000 gland rejuvenation procedures on prisoners, fellow medical
professionals, and occasionally a civilian over his nearly 40 years as a San Quentin doctor. Instead than viewing
inmates as a psychologically unstable group likely to participate in human experiments in exchange for better
treatment or due to their propensity for self-destruction, he saw them as an inexhaustible supply of test subjects.
He started utilizing animal testicles, such as those from goats and deer, which he crushed into a paste and
injected into inmates' abdomens when he ran out of supply. By the time Stanley left San Quentin, he had
Stanley was certain that his research would reduce crime, revive elderly men, and prevent inappropriate people
from having children. In the modern state, when the lines between punishment, rehabilitation, and study were
ETHICAL MISCONDUCT:
In this research study, Leo Stanley broke several research ethics and conducted an unethical clinical trial.
During this research study, Many volunteers assumed it would enhance their health – Stanley claimed
vasectomies would prevent some sexually transmitted illnesses, which they do not and possibly boost their
libido.
He also started utilizing animal testicles, such as those from goats and deer, which he crushed into a paste and
injected into inmates’ abdomens when he ran out of supply that caused their health to deteriorate dangerously.
REFERENCE:
Futterman, A. (2021, January 11) 5 Unethical Medical Experiments Brought Out of the
REFLECTION:
Numerous things were done in the past that would be considered violations of the Human Rights Act presently.
While there was no legal standard that would prevent individuals from performing such things, they believed
those things were humane, justified, and revolutionary. In reality, it was horrifying and just sick.
It was sickening to know that a doctor would experiment on a corpse, cut out his parts, and put them on another
person’s body. It would be acceptable if the organ was used to focus on saving somebody else’s life, such as a
People, regardless of how poorly they behaved, were not deserving of being experimented on by a doctor just to
prove that he was outstanding in his profession. Prison systems exist as a means of repression for lawbreakers,
and death sentences and life without parole have also been used as punitive actions; thus, such actions were not
needed to further punish those people deprived of liberty. It was wrong to open up to someone without his
Using people as experimental subjects, regardless of whether they were willing or not, was not humane. The
practice was not ethical, professional, or reasonable. Irrespective of how we’d like our world to progress and
have solutions and treatments for every health issue, it would be wrong to be using living things, regardless of
their pasts, as test subjects to investigate the effectiveness of an experiment, just as we campaign to cease