Policy is often made based on historical understandings of particular events, and the story of the “Tuskegee” study has, arguably more than any other medical research experiment, shaped policy surrounding human subjects.Footnote 1 The forty-year study of “untreated syphilis in the male Negro” sparked outrage in 1972 after it became widely known, and it inspired the political push for requirements for informed consent, the protection of vulnerable subjects, and oversight by institutional review boards.Footnote 2
When the story of this study circulates, however, it often becomes mythical. In truth, the United States Public Health Service (PHS) doctors who ran the study observed the course of the already acquired and untreated late latent disease in hundreds of African American men in Macon County, Alabama. They provided a little treatment in the first few months in 1932 and then neither extensive heavy-metals treatment nor penicillin after it proved a cure for many with the late latent stage of the disease.Footnote 3 Yet much folklore asserts that the doctors went beyond this neglect, and that they secretly infected the men by injecting them with the bacteria that cause syphilis. This virally spread belief about the PHS’s intentional infecting appears almost daily in books, articles, talks, letters, Web sites, tweets, news broadcasts, political rhetoric, and above all in whispers and conversations. It is reinforced when photographs of the study’s blood draws circulate, especially when they are cropped to show prominently a black arm and a white hand on a syringe that could, to an unknowing eye, be seen as an injection.
Historians of the study have spent decades now trying to correct the misunderstandings in the public and the academy, and to make the facts as knowable as possible.Footnote 4 The story is horrific enough, it is argued, without perpetuating misunderstanding over what really did happen and how many knew about it.Footnote 5 What if, however, the PHS did conduct a somewhat secret study whose subjects were infected with syphilis by one of the PHS doctors who also worked in “Tuskegee?” How should this be acknowledged and affect how we discuss historical understandings that drive the need for human subject protection?
RUMORS AND REALITIES
Scholars who wish to debunk the myth of deliberate infection in the study in Tuskegee can acknowledge that myths do express some basic realities. As the oral historian Alessandro Portelli argues, “The wrong tales allow us to recognize the interests of the tellers and the dreams and desires beneath them.”Footnote 6 “A rumor,” other folklorists suggest, “is a ‘form of communication through which men [and women] caught together in an ambiguous situation attempt to construct a meaningful interpretation of it by pooling their intellectual resources.’”Footnote 7 In a highly racialized and racist country, the idea that government scientists—drunk on their power over trusting sharecroppers in need of care—would deliberately and secretly infect black men with a debilitating and sometimes deadly disease seems possible.
Yet those scholars may also argue that people who believe in such deliberate infection are confusing the study with other American 1960s and 1970s horror tales about overzealous medical researchers who injected cancer cells into elderly Jewish patients and provided live hepatitis cells through feeding or injections to young children with mental retardation. The conflating also comes when the study is referred to as “America’s Nuremberg” (to equate its effect on ethics) and to link it to the horrors of the monstrous Nazi medical experiments. In addition, to think the men were infected taps deep into our cultural collective consciences’ fears of experimentation. It avoids considering the study’s unwitting participants’ sexual activities, or those of their parents, since syphilis is primarily, of course, a sexually transmitted disease.Footnote 8 To assume the men in the study were infected, rather than watched for decades, appears to make the racism worse, although it is the very ordinariness of the withholding of treatment that ought to frighten us more.Footnote 9
Historians and other scholars have also argued that there were debates over whether the heavy-metals treatments were appropriate for those in the late latent stage of the disease and that public health’s mission was to stop contagion, not focus on chronic illness. Others have claimed, too, that the concern with the dangers of penicillin limited some of its usefulness, especially for patients who were at least two decades out from initial syphilitic infection.Footnote 10
Historians may also emphasize medical understandings of syphilis’s stages and transmission. These explanations require discussing the multiple stages of the disease and when and how decisions about treating those in latency were made. More important, even if the government doctors had wanted to give the men syphilis, it is very difficult to pass on syphilis outside sexual contact, breast-feeding, or congenitally from a still-infectious mother to her newborn. To explain this is also to confront pre-twentieth-century understandings of the disease as hereditary, not just congenital, since syphilis cannot be passed down in genes or somehow through a bloodline. It demands explaining that the doctors could not just inject the spirochetal bacteria that cause syphilis easily from the blood of one person to another, and that centuries of research efforts had demonstrated the difficulties of finding ways experimentally to re-create the disease in the healthy.Footnote 11 The spirochete-shaped bacteria that cause syphilis cannot be cultured and grown in vitro (unlike N. gonorrhoea, which can be).
In sum, it takes time and a commitment to learning the medical science, understanding standard public health practices, and considering cultural beliefs in both the public and health-care communities to explain why the men in Alabama were not, and could not easily have been, infected by the PHS, and yet why this is believed. Telling a quick black-and-white story makes for a better rhetorical media or political sound bite, or a brief historical introduction in a glossed-over bioethics lesson.
Ironically, though, the mythic version of the “Tuskegee” study may offer a better picture of some of the mid-century PHS ethics than the seemingly more informed accounts. For Public Health Service researchers did, in fact, deliberately infect poor and vulnerable men and women with syphilis in order to study the disease. The mistake of the myth is to set that story in Alabama, when it took place further south, in Guatemala.
The Guatemala story emerges from the records of work done by the PHS’s Dr. John C. Cutler between 1946 and 1948, now in the University of Pittsburgh archives.Footnote 12 An internationally known public health researcher-administrator and expert on sexually transmitted diseases and reproductive health, Cutler had been an assistant surgeon general in the PHS and the deputy director of the Pan American Sanitary Bureau (a precursor to the Pan American Health Organization).Footnote 13 He worked in Guatemala, India, and Haiti and ended his career as, his obituary in 2003 read, “a much beloved professor both at the graduate school of Public Health and the Graduate School of Public and International Affairs” at Pitt.Footnote 14
Cutler was dedicated to researching and conquering sexually transmitted (then known as venereal) diseases and providing usable and effective contraception to women. He published more than fifty articles on varying venereal diseases, the prophylaxis of disease with chemical contraceptives, and the lessons for ending the AIDS epidemic.Footnote 15 Those who know about the “Tuskegee” study will recognize his name as a researcher in that experiment during the 1960s and one of its staunchest defenders on PBS’s 1993 NOVA film about it entitled “The Deadly Deception,” produced more than twenty years after the study closed.Footnote 16
Almost two decades before his involvement with the study in Alabama, the PHS put Cutler in charge of a two-year research project in Guatemala. This experiment in the global South, rather than the American South, differed from the study in Alabama in two majors ways: government doctors did infect people with syphilis (and gonorrhea and chancroid) and then did treat them with penicillin. In this research program of a series of carefully delineated experiments, PHS doctors exposed their subjects through the use of infectious prostitutes or directly through inoculums made from tissue from human and animal syphilitic gummas and chancres, or pus of gonorrhea or chancroid filed sores. After learning what they could from each exposure that caused actual infection (and not all did), they used penicillin, expecting, if not always, curing the infections.Footnote 17
Exploring why these experiments in Guatemala were so different from those in Alabama provides insight into the ethical concerns of the PHS researchers, the powerful pull of the need for scientific knowledge, and the difficulty of analyzing the interrelationship and movement of research between what has been called the “imperial periphery” and “metropolitan transformations.”Footnote 18
PENICILLIN CURE OR CHEMICAL PROPHYLAXIS?
By the end of World War II, penicillin became somewhat more widely available and had begun to demonstrate its effectiveness as a cure with early and secondary syphilis and numerous other diseases.Footnote 19 Much of the drug’s doses and limitations still remained to be tested. Looking toward the future, 1940s syphilologists began to realize, however, as Johns Hopkins’s Joseph Earle Moore would lament a decade later, “The biologically minded clinician regrets … that syphilis seems to be vanishing with most of its fascinating and more fundamental riddles still unsolved.”Footnote 20
One of these remaining questions had to do with if, in addition to condoms, there was a need for a better chemical prophylaxis against the disease that a man could apply directly to his penis right after possible exposure, or whether just relying upon penicillin as cure from a health professional after the syphilis was diagnosed would be sufficient.Footnote 21 Syphilologists were well aware of the problems with many of the serologies (blood tests) done to determine syphilis, the inability to translate animal research studies (primarily done with rabbits and sometimes with chimpanzees) to humans, the complicated chronicity of the disease, and the wiliness of the syphilitic spirochete that had fascinated them for decades.
In 1944, the PHS had done experiments on prophylaxis in gonorrhea at the Terre Haute Federal Penitentiary in the United States. In this prison, the “volunteers” were deliberately injected with gonorrhea, but the PHS had found it difficult to get the men to exhibit infection and the study was abandoned.Footnote 22 To continue that work, and to extend it to syphilis, the PHS looked south beyond American borders.
The PHS had a long history of international work going back to its nineteenth-century participation in foreign quarantines and sanitary conferences with a focus on infectious diseases, and then its 1945 establishment of an Office of International Relations to formalize these efforts.Footnote 23 To coordinate disease control in the Americas, the PHS had led the organizing in 1901 of the Pan American Sanitary Bureau (the precursor to the Pan American Health Organization), and the U.S. surgeon general, official head of the PHS, served as director of the bureau between 1902 until 1936.Footnote 24 Indeed, one historian has argued that the Pan American Sanitary Bureau “functioned until the late 1930s … as a virtual branch of the [PHS].”Footnote 25 In turn, many Central American and Latin American countries sought assistance from the PHS and the Rockefeller Foundation. Their funds and surveys assisted in the creation of federal control over health in regional and indigenous areas through the development of a public health infrastructure.
The United Fruit Company owned and controlled much of Guatemala, the quintessential “banana republic,” in the first half of the twentieth century. When the PHS looked to Guatemala for its research in the immediate post–World War II years, it came into the country during the period known for its relative freedoms. Between 1944 and the U.S.-led CIA coup of the elected government in 1954, efforts were made at labor protection laws, land reform, and democratic elections. The PHS was part of the endeavor to use Guatemala for scientific research as it presumed to transfer laboratory materials, skills, and knowledge to a Guatemalan public health elite.Footnote 26
Guatemala appeared to be an excellent site for this new study for several reasons. The PHS training of Dr. Juan Funes, Guatemala’s leading venereal disease public health official, made the forging of close cooperation easier and the building of a public health infrastructure important. Unlike Alabama, where the PHS expected to find a large number of subjects with the late latent stage of the disease already, Guatemala offered subjects who did not yet have syphilis. For in his somewhat haphazard surveys in the 1930s, the Harvard Medical School Tropical Medicine professor George Cheever Shattuck found little syphilis in the Guatemalan highlands and reported little in the army as well. Shattuck shared the belief of Guatemalan health officials that “syphilis is more frequent in Latins [especially in Guatemala City] than in Indians and that, when manifested in an Indian, it appears in mild form.”Footnote 27 Racialized assumptions about the disease, central to the project in Alabama, also followed it to Guatemala.
With a grant from the National Institute of Health to the Pan American Sanitary Bureau under the direction of the PHS’s Venereal Disease Research Laboratory (VDRL), the PHS cooperated with officials at Guatemala’s Ministry of Health, the National Army of the Revolution, the National Mental Health Hospital, and the Ministry of Justice on what was benignly called “a series of experimental studies on syphilis in man.” The focus of the experiments was to understand whether various chemicals, other than the ones then available, could be used as a prophylaxis against syphilis after sexual exposure to the disease, to try and see what caused false-positive serologic tests for the disease, and to demonstrate more fully when and how differing dosages of penicillin actually cured infection in various venereal diseases.Footnote 28
The PHS and the Pan American Sanitary Bureau assigned Cutler, who had been working at the VDRL and on the Terre Haute prison gonorrhea project, to lead this research in Guatemala with the assistance of the PHS-trained Funes.
Cutler and Funes had two goals. One was to use what was called “syphilization” to test the human response to “fresh infective material to enhance body response to disease … [to understand] superinfection and reinfection.”Footnote 29 The second goal was to find ways to prevent the disease immediately after exposure.Footnote 30 During World War II, the United States had provided its troops with calomel-sulpha-thiazole ointment in “pro kits” (prophylaxis kits). These kits were painful to use, however, so the PHS wondered if less noxious chemicals or penicillin could be used instead.Footnote 31
“NORMAL EXPOSURE” AND NORMAL SCIENCE
Animal experimentation, especially with rabbits, was long a mainstay in twentieth-century syphilis research, but it could not answer these pressing research questions. The PHS researchers wanted to do a study where they knew there would be a good deal of what they politely called “normal exposure” to the disease in humans. As subjects, they chose the usual quartet of the available and contained: prisoners in a national penitentiary, inmates in Guatemala’s only mental hospital, children in the national orphanage, and soldiers in a barracks in the capital.
Guatemala had legalized prostitution and “allowed prostitutes to pay regular visits to men in penal institutions, ” they explained in their reports.Footnote 32 With the cooperation of officials at the Ministry of Justice and the warden of Guatemala City’s Central Penitentiary, which housed nearly fifteen hundred inmates, prostitutes who tested positive for either syphilis or gonorrhea were allowed to offer their services to prison inmates, paid for by U.S. taxpayers through the funds of the PHS. In yet another set of experiments, uninfected prostitutes had inoculums of the diseases placed on their cervixes before the sexual visits began. Serological tests were done on the inmates before the prostitutes were invited to the prison and then afterward to see if infection had occurred. The men were divided into groups and various chemical and biological prophylaxis techniques were tested after presumed infection. If positive, the subjects were then supposed to be provided with enough penicillin to produce a cure.
Rabbits, of course, were much easier to manage and manipulate than human beings, as the doctors soon discovered. Not enough of the sexually well-serviced men (the researchers actually timed how long they spent with the prostitutes and thought they acted “like rabbits”), even when plied with alcohol, seemed to be getting syphilis.Footnote 33 The prostitutes were not easily controlled either, and one researcher lamented, “Unfortunately our female donor is leaving her profession for marriage and is no longer available.”Footnote 34 The next problem the researchers ran into regarded the blood tests: too many positives even before more “normal exposure” occurred. Since they needed men who either had never had the disease or had already been cured of the disease for their studies, they discovered their pool was too small for statistical significance to be possible. Their first answer then became not abandoning the research but rather questioning the tests.
The serology (blood tests) for syphilis had always been a problem, as the balance between sensitivity and specificity created many false positives and false negatives. And as the researchers wrote, “The impression is widespread that in certain tropical and subtropical areas there is a high degree of seropositivity which may not be truly indicative of the prevalence of syphilis.”Footnote 35 There had long been an understanding that the presence of yaws (another treponemal disease) and malaria could affect positive blood tests for syphilis. In Guatemala, while they were getting positive reactions on the tests, they could find no clinical signs or spinal-fluid evidence of the disease in the men’s bodies.Footnote 36 To deal with this, the researchers had to do repeat and differing blood tests (drawing 10 cc of blood every week or biweekly) to see if there had been a spontaneous cure of the disease or rather the complex pattern on the blood tests often seen in long-standing syphilis cases.
Even though the inmates were in a prison and there was no mention of any kind of informed consent, the researchers met resistance. As they reported, “The inmates were for the most part uneducated and superstitious. Most of them believed they were being weakened” by the frequent blood withdrawals. Even though penicillin and iron pills were promised, “in their minds there was no connection between the loss of a ‘large tube of blood’ and possible benefits of a small pill.”Footnote 37 This resistance and the difficulty of managing the prisoners suggested perhaps the studies on the serologies could be better done elsewhere.
With the cooperation of the Guatemalan government, the researchers turned to 438 children between the ages of six and sixteen in the national orphanage to study the blood tests, not to give the children syphilis.Footnote 38 Three children who appeared to have signs of congenital syphilis after repeat testing and examination were given penicillin. Yet another eighty-nine gave positive results on their tests but showed no clinical signs of the disease. Finding that the problem was not with the antigens used in the tests, the research physicians argued for the use of specific kinds of blood tests with this kind of population to rule out confounding factors they could not identify.Footnote 39
They still, however, had not answered the question of whether penicillin could be used for prophylaxis, not just cure, after a definitive positive blood test, in comparison to other chemicals applied directly to the genitalia. Faced with this and continued concerns with the serologies and reinfection after treatment, they turned to experiments with the inmates in the country’s only asylum. Here it was not possible to introduce prostitutes, follow the inmates around to watch and time their sexual encounters, or gain acceptance of the female patients for physical examinations. So the researchers planned an inoculation, rather than “sexual exposure,” study, though most of the asylum officials at first thought the inoculation was just another kind of drug.Footnote 40
As in Tuskegee and throughout the global South in these years, the cooperation was sought with the institution, not with the subject-inmates or their families. And the best way to gain that cooperation was by offering supplies. In a severely underfunded and overcrowded institution, the PHS supplied “much needed anti-convulsant drugs, particularly Dilantin, for the large part of the population which were epileptic.” They also “bought a refrigerator for biologicals, a motion picture projector that supplied the sole recreation for the inmates, metal cups, plates and forks to supplement the completely inadequate supply available.”Footnote 41 Individual subjects were offered cigarettes: an entire packet for inoculation, blood draws, or spinal taps and a single cigarette for “clinical observation.”Footnote 42
CREATING AND INTRODUCING THE INOCULUM
Making the syphilis inoculum was neither easy nor simple. One method was to grind up gummas (syphilitic growth) in the testes of rabbits infected with the Nichols and Frew strains of the disease. This proved extremely difficult as rabbits had to be flown in from the VDRL in Staten Island to Cutler in Guatemala City; many died en route or did not develop enough of an infection. In addition, the researchers tried to make inoculum from scrapings of the chancres on the bodies of already infected asylum inmates, or on men from the army who had a “street strain,” picked up by local prostitutes not involved in the study itself.Footnote 43 Once the sample was obtained (either by killing the rabbits or scraping the men’s penile chancres), the live inoculum had to be made quickly since the spirochetes could not last more than forty-five to ninety minutes outside a body. This left very little time to remove the materials, centrifuge it with fresh homemade beef-heart broth, and prepare to deliver them to the subjects. Some inoculum was created with heat-killed and others with the living spirochetes.
Then the inoculum had to be introduced into the bodies of the subjects. On the women inmates, because of what was called “local prejudices against male viewing of the body, even by physicians,” the inoculum was inserted after needles were used to abrade the women’s forearms, face, or mouth. With the men, the inoculation was often much more direct, after what soldiers for generations had called the “short arm” inspection. They chose men with “at least moderately long foreskins [to keep the mucus membranes moist]” and who could “sit or stand calmly in one spot for several hours.” In the experiments, a doctor held the subject’s penis, pulled back the foreskin, abraded the penis slightly just short of drawing blood by scraping the skin with a hypodermic needle, introduced a cotton pledget (or small dressing), and dripped drops of the syphilitic emulsion onto the pad and through it to the roughed skin on the man’s penis for at least an hour, sometimes two.
This was compared to other forms of introducing the syphilis to the body, including scraping the forearm before providing the inoculum, or ingestion of syphilitic tissue mixed with distilled water, the removal of spinal fluid that was then infused with the syphilitic mixture and reintroduced into the body, and venipunctures of the mixtures into the median cubital vein of the forearm.Footnote 44 In other studies of prophylaxis at an army barracks, the men were allowed to have sex with uninfected prostitutes, then had the syphilitic inoculum put into the meatus of their penis. They were told to urinate an hour later and apply differing kinds of chemical prophylaxis.Footnote 45 In still other studies, the inoculum was placed on the cervix of prostitutes before they were allowed to have sex with the prisoners.
Cutler’s scientific fervor was impressive, for his sense of the dangers of syphilis was acute. The experiments varied the ways the inoculations were done, whether the syphilitic mixture came from a single chancre, a combination of “donors,” or from the rabbits or the bodies of infected prostitutes and inmates and soldiers. The researchers gave out differing kinds of chemical prophylaxis to some of their subjects, or set up other men as controls who had no prophylaxis. They made sure no one had the disease, or had taken anything for it, before they began the experimentation.
Anyone infected was given penicillin and supposed to be cured. The studies involved hundreds and hundreds of men and women, many of whom had their photographs taken and left in the files. Some of the subjects were in multiple experiments. The total number (representing subjects not discrete individuals) appears to be: “696 exposed to syphilis … 722 to gonorrhea … and 142 to chancroid.” Preliminary analysis suggests that 14 percent of those in the syphilis studies many not have received what was defined as “adequate treatment,” while the percentages cured with the gonorrhea and chancroid were “99.5%” and “93%,” respectively.Footnote 46
DECEPTION
Deception was central here, as in Tuskegee. Cutler, writing to famed penicillin researcher and PHS physician R. C. Arnold in 1947, admitted that they were not really telling very many people that the inoculum contained the spirochetes that caused syphilis. “As you can imagine,” Cutler reported to his colleague, “we are holding our breaths, and we are explaining to the patients and others concerned with but a few key exceptions, that the treatment is a new one utilizing serum followed by penicillin. This double talk keeps me hopping at times.”Footnote 47 In a second letter, he repeated his concerns that “a few words to the wrong person here, or even at home, might wreck it or parts of it.”Footnote 48
Leading scientists knew that secrecy, and even law breaking, was sometimes necessary to further research. Thomas Rivers, the famed virologist who led the Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research Hospital in New York, made this clear in his 1967 memoir when he recalled: “Well, all I can say is, it’s against the law to do many things, but the law winks when a reputable man wants to do a scientific experiment. For example, the criminal code of the City of New York holds that it is a felony to inject a person with infectious material. Well, I tested out live yellow fever vaccine right on my ward in the Rockefeller Hospital. It was no secret, and I assure you that the people in the New York City Department of Health knew it was being done. … Unless the law winks occasionally, you have no progress in medicine.”Footnote 49
Rather than law breaking, in Guatemala the secrecy added to the difficulties of an already challenging project. Experiments on prophylaxis needed to determine how much inoculum to give, the time it was allowed to enter the body, and the kinds of “antiseptic agents” and “spirocheticidal” therapy to provide.Footnote 50 Keeping track of the hundreds of subjects proved complicated, especially in the mental hospital, when patient’s names were forgotten, or the staff called them, for example, “The mute of St. Marcos.” Eliese Cutler, a Wellesley College alumna and Cutler’s wife, helped because she “got to know the patients and helped keep things straight” through her photographs. Some of the inmates were given the syphilis emulsions numerous times, and another, they lamented, “after scarification, and the first application of emulsion … fled the room and was not found until 2 hours later with the pledget still in place.”Footnote 51 Once it became clear that some of the inoculum took, researchers were supposed to be “scrupulous” in making sure the penicillin was provided to those infected, and the blood testing continued.Footnote 52
The Guatemalan officials had their own demands. They asked Cutler to test and treat men in army barracks, to do surveys of disease in the lowlands, and to provide more penicillin for the country as part of the price for cooperation. He traded off drugs for malaria at the orphanage for the right to continue blood testing. His bosses in the PHS worried, however, that Cutler might be making too many promises of supplies and embarking on too ambitious a program. The PHS was already fighting a battle at home to continue its work in venereal disease in the face of the seemingly easy penicillin cure, so the project in Guatemala became difficult to justify.Footnote 53 After multiple letters, Cutler promised to be careful and reported, “We shall use our supply sparingly so as to have it available at all times for use in demonstration programs and to build good will.”Footnote 54
Cutler remained confident that he had a gold mine for the research. While he was getting pressure from home to justify the abrading and inoculations, he reminded his supervisors that “normal sex leads to this kind of trauma and minute lacerations.” Writing to his director-supervisor (the famed PHS researcher John F. Mahoney, who had first demonstrated penicillin’s power over syphilis in 1943), Cutler noted that “with the opportunity offered here to study syphilis from the standpoint of pure science just as Chesney studies it in the rabbit [,] it should be possible to justify the projects in the event of the impossibility of resolution of the prophylactic program.”Footnote 55
Back in the United States, leading scientists were also hopeful, at first. Inoculation studies earlier in the century had caused much controversy, and after the 1910s most of it proceeded on animals, not humans.Footnote 56 Mahoney told Cutler in October 1946 that “your show is already attracting rather wide and favorable attention up here. We are frequently asked as to the progress of the work. Doctor T. B. Turner at Johns Hopkins wants us to check on the pathogenicity in man of the rabbit spirochete; Doctor Neurath of Duke would like to have us follow patients with his verification procedures; Doctor Parran [the surgeon general] and probably Doctor Moore [the leading syphilologist at Hopkins] might drop in for a visit after the first of the year.”Footnote 57 Harry Eagle of the National Cancer Institute, who had created one of the serology tests for syphilis and did major work on penicillin, wanted in on the studies as well, since his theory that penicillin could be used as a prophylaxis had only been tested in animals, not humans. He was so angry that he was not allowed in on the data that he complained to the surgeon general.Footnote 58
The studies in Guatemala proved problematic, however, both for scientific and political reasons. Mahoney admitted that Cutler’s data were not showing that enough infection could be transferred and that “the circumstance confirms the conclusion drawn from the Terre Haute study that a very important factor other than the presence of the organism must be operative in the transmission of the disease.”Footnote 59 By the fall of 1947, interest in prophylaxis was waning at home, and Mahoney told Cutler that there would be very little money if the study were just for serologies and penicillin therapy. Yet they assumed that racial and climatic differences would require a broader sweep. “A comprehensive study of the reliability of serology as a diagnostic instrument among aboriginal peoples in tropical America would require a different approach being used at present,” Mahoney argued. “We would be obliged to canvas the South and Central American nations, the Mexican Indians, the Indian tribes in the United States, and finally, the southern negro.”Footnote 60
SHOULD THEY DO THIS?
There was also what bioethicists would later call the “yuck factor” of all the work, and the ethics.Footnote 61 PHS physician R. C. Arnold, who supervised Cutler from afar, was more troubled than was Cutler about the ethics of the project. Eight months after the “Doctors’ Trials” at Nuremberg had ended, he confided to Cutler, “I am a bit, in fact more than a bit, leery of the experiment with the insane people. They can not give consent, do not know what is going on, and if some goody organization got wind of the work, they would raise a lot of smoke. I think the soldiers would be best or the prisoners for they can give consent. Maybe I’m too conservative. … Also, how many knew what was going on. I realize that a pt [patient] or a dozen could be infected, develop the disease and be cured before anything could be suspected. … In the report, I see no reason to say where the work was done and the type of volunteer.”Footnote 62
Everyone involved with these studies seemed to know they were treading on complicated ethical grounds. There had been debates within the National Research Council in the early 1940s over the ethics of the Terre Haute prison study on gonorrhea. The PHS knew that such studies had to be methodologically sound and scientifically fruitful, historian Harry Marks has argued, to justify the risks to prisoners.Footnote 63 Yet the PHS knew there were very few other ways to get at this information and to find a way to stop the spread of syphilis through prophylaxis before the disease was established, not just cure it afterward. While the gonorrhea studies had failed in Terre Haute, they still hoped the new trials on gonorrhea and syphilis in Guatemala would prove so successful that the risks would have been worth it.
Malaria specialist G. Robert Coatney, who had done prison malaria studies, visited the project in February 1947. In reporting to Cutler after he returned to the States, he explained that he had brought Surgeon General Thomas Parran up to date and that with a “merry twinkle [that] came into his eye … [he] said ‘You know, we couldn’t do such an experiment in this country.’”Footnote 64
Cutler, too, acknowledged that other syphilologists thought human experimentation on penicillin as a prevention for syphilis that required inoculation with the disease “could not be ethically carried out.” Concerned that discussion of this ethical problem was taking place in the United States just as information on their grant in Guatemala was published in the Journal of the American Medical Association, Cutler told Mahoney, “It is becoming just as clear to us as it appears to be to you that it would not be advisable to have too many people concerned with this work in order to keep down talk and premature writing. … We are just a little bit concerned about the possibility of having anything said about our program that would adversely affect its continuation.”Footnote 65
Mahoney continued to worry. There is a good deal of “gossip” in high places about what was going on in Guatemala, he warned Cutler. “I hope you will not hesitate to stop the experimental work in the event of there being an undue amount of interest in that phase of the study.” Mahoney, as with Arnold, seemed less concerned with the prostitute transmission studies taking place in the prison, but seemed more squeamish about the politics and morality of the inoculation studies taking place in the mental hospital.Footnote 66
There was also the problem that the studies, requiring such effort to induce infection, could not be duplicated elsewhere. Mahoney told Cutler about a year and half into the project, that “in syphilis, unless we can transmit the infection readily and without recourse to scarification or direct implantation, the possibilities of studying the subject are not bright.” The procedures were, he noted “drastic … [and] beyond the range of natural transmission and will not serve as a basis for the study of a locally applied prophylactic agent.”Footnote 67 Cutler did his best to try the studies in multiple ways, to use differing strains of the bacteria, to move between animal and human donors, and to emphasize the repeatability.Footnote 68
Even as Cutler continued a number of differing studies, his PHS supervisors were acutely aware that this had to stop. Supplies were limited, and the growing use of penicillin diminished political support for this kind of research. By 1948, Cutler was told to finish up his work, leave the laboratory materials for the Guatemalan venereal disease control effort, and to come home to be assigned elsewhere. Eventually, Cutler and his colleagues would write up the serology findings, and a colleague would publish some details in a Spanish-language public health journal.Footnote 69 Cutler put the final report and the hundreds of photographs his wife had taken into his files, the only record of his decades-long research career left behind.Footnote 70 The extraordinary efforts he had made to produce disease and understand various kinds of prophylaxis were buried in the files.
DOES THIS MATTER?
Dr. Joseph Earle Moore had been right that the penicillin cure for syphilis left many unanswered questions about the disease. Although Cutler’s work helped refine serological testing, and suggested a better chemical prophylaxis, it made little impact on syphilis research. Cutler would go on to do another inoculation study five years later in 1953 with the PHS’s Harold Magnuson at New York’s Sing Sing Prison with sixty-two “human volunteers,” using, as he had in Guatemala, both heat-killed and virulent organisms made from ground-up rabbit testes. These inoculations, however, were done intracutaneously and subcutaneously. No one was abrading the penises of these American men, even in a prison. Anyone positive was treated, too, with penicillin. These prison studies were done to answer some questions about reinfection and whether having treated syphilis and then being provided with the “booster” of new disease created immunity to further infection. The extensively quoted and published report on this Sing Sing work covered much of the history of inoculation syphilis, but it made no mention of the studies in Guatemala.Footnote 71
Why, then, does any of this work in Guatemala matter, besides the arcane history of Cutler’s links to Terre Haute, Guatemala, Sing Sing, and then Tuskegee, and our prurient and horrified sense of what they did without any individual permission? Do we need to have yet another awful story of the “bad old days” of medical research before the creation of institutional review boards, which are presumed to protect human subjects? Does this suggest ways that those who are concerned with policy toward subjects should rethink what happened in Tuskegee?
The Guatemala study matters for several reasons. It demonstrates the links between the United States and the rest of the world in public health. There was traffic in ideas, in practices, in justifications, and in the bodies of researchers that moved across borders.Footnote 72 Ways of treating subjects in one place, deceptions allowed in another, moved around and through the creation of a culture of research. It is not just public health practices, but also public health research, that crossed over from country to country. It raises yet again the question of whether standards held to in the United States are also used when research goes abroad.Footnote 73
Only by understanding this context can we understand the decisions made by the Public Health Service. While it had qualms about what was being done in Guatemala, the PHS allowed that work to continue for two years. Having made that decision, it might well have regarded the project in Alabama—which did not infect anyone—as relatively benign.
The story of the work in Guatemala also confirms that fact about noninfecting in the “Tuskegee” study, since it shows the difficulty of infecting individuals with syphilis in a scientific project. The lengths that Cutler and his colleagues had to go to give the disease to the inmates of the asylum, prison, and army barracks in Guatemala, and then later in less atrocious ways at Sing Sing, provide us with a way to say that this is not what happened in Tuskegee. Surely, the survivors of the study in Alabama would remember that this happened to them if there had been such injecting and abrading? In all the records (either in the federal archives or those at Tuskegee University) of aspirins, iron tonics, and pill jars shipped to Tuskegee, there is no mention of money spent for rabbits, for laboratories to create the inoculums, or efforts to do this.
At the same time, the Guatemala story may make it even easier to imagine that the government doctors did infect men in Alabama. PHS researchers of the period were technically capable of infecting people with syphilis, even if doing so was more burdensome than the researchers wished. And they were morally capable of infecting people with syphilis, for their faith in their cause allowed them to infect people with this dreadful disease without their consent or even knowledge—at least when those people lacked power and white skin. These facts so complicate the Tuskegee story that I deliberately omitted the Guatemala studies from my book Examining Tuskegee, lest they make it too hard to explain that the men in Alabama were not infected.
Policymakers often pick and choose differing historical accountings to justify the decisions they make. Historians have the luxury to wallow in context and knowable facts, while others make meaning, law, and regulations from our work. The “Tuskegee” Study is often told in a simple manner and frequently misremembered. The inoculation studies in Guatemala put the effort in Tuskegee in context but can also increase fear of medical research. For if the hue and cry has been to “remember Tuskegee” to justify control over medical research, we can only imagine what the sounds might be if these experiments in Guatemala are included in the portrait. As much as we can be squeamish and angry over what was being done in these studies, they force us to consider how we tell these stories and the policy we make now, as so much of our research is global and the risks and benefits of experimentation always in need of recalibration.Footnote 74
OCTOBER 2010 ADDENDUM
There was worldwide outrage in response to this paper once knowledge about the study reached the highest levels of the U.S. government and an apology was issued to the Guatemalan government and its people on October 1, 2010. I gave a copy of this paper pre-publication in late June 2010 to Dr. David Sencer, the former director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, whom I had interviewed over the study in Tuskegee, so that I could be sure the medical information was correct.Footnote 75 Upon reading it, Dr. Sencer asked if I would allow others in CDC to know about it before publication. I agreed. Others within CDC read it, spoke to me about it, and became quite concerned. They made no effort to ask me not to publish it. They dispatched Dr. John Douglas, a leading syphilis expert, to Pittsburgh to examine the records and to provide a report that confirmed my findings.Footnote 76 My unpublished paper and Douglas’s report made it up the chain of command through CDC to the National Institutes of Health, the Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS), the Department of State, and the White House.
On October 1, 2010, Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton and Secretary of DHHS Kathleen Sebelius offered a formal apology to Guatemala for this research, which they called “abhorrent,” “unethical,” and “reprehensible.”Footnote 77 President Barack Obama called Guatemalan President Álvaro Colom “to express his deep regret.”Footnote 78 The directors of the National Institutes of Health and CDC called the study “regrettable and deeply saddening.”Footnote 79 The Institute of Medicine and the President’s Bioethics Commission are scheduled to provide reports both on what happened and the current protections in place. The media frenzy about this has circled the globe with coverage and editorials in major newspapers, and more than fifteen hundred stories have been filed. Its effect on the protection of human subjects around the world will have to be assessed in the future.