News (Media Awareness Project) - US CA: Report: State Probing Stanford Drug Tests On Teen |
Title: | US CA: Report: State Probing Stanford Drug Tests On Teen |
Published On: | 1999-08-16 |
Source: | Associated Press |
Fetched On: | 2008-09-05 23:33:05 |
REPORT: STATE PROBING STANFORD DRUG TESTS ON TEEN INMATES
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) -- State officials are investigating the legality of
a Stanford University program that tested a powerful psychiatric drug on
teen-age inmates, the Los Angeles Times reported today.
"We're not going to put up with wards being used as guinea pigs," Hilary
McLean, Gov. Gray Davis' spokeswoman, told the newspaper.
Earlier this month, the state attorney general and the state inspector
general were ordered to look into the "legality of Stanford's study," McLean
said.
The eight-week Stanford experiment took place in 1997 at a detention
facility in Stockton. Sixty-one boys and men, ages 14 to 18, were given
Depakote -- a drug used to treat seizures and mania -- to see if it would
curtail aggression; all agreed to take part, the newspaper reported.
None of the youths appear to have been harmed, according to subsequent
examinations. However, state officials question whether the drug tests were
in the best interest of the teen-agers.
"In the legal sense, and maybe in the moral sense, we missed the boat on
this one," said Robert Presley, the state's top corrections official.
Stanford officials said the facility's former medical director, Dr. Dan
Cashman, assured them the testing was legal.
To end the confusion, Presley issued a directive two weeks ago, stating the
youth detention centers cannot conduct, or allow anyone else to conduct,
medical research on inmates unless it meets the governor's approval and is
codified into law.
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) -- State officials are investigating the legality of
a Stanford University program that tested a powerful psychiatric drug on
teen-age inmates, the Los Angeles Times reported today.
"We're not going to put up with wards being used as guinea pigs," Hilary
McLean, Gov. Gray Davis' spokeswoman, told the newspaper.
Earlier this month, the state attorney general and the state inspector
general were ordered to look into the "legality of Stanford's study," McLean
said.
The eight-week Stanford experiment took place in 1997 at a detention
facility in Stockton. Sixty-one boys and men, ages 14 to 18, were given
Depakote -- a drug used to treat seizures and mania -- to see if it would
curtail aggression; all agreed to take part, the newspaper reported.
None of the youths appear to have been harmed, according to subsequent
examinations. However, state officials question whether the drug tests were
in the best interest of the teen-agers.
"In the legal sense, and maybe in the moral sense, we missed the boat on
this one," said Robert Presley, the state's top corrections official.
Stanford officials said the facility's former medical director, Dr. Dan
Cashman, assured them the testing was legal.
To end the confusion, Presley issued a directive two weeks ago, stating the
youth detention centers cannot conduct, or allow anyone else to conduct,
medical research on inmates unless it meets the governor's approval and is
codified into law.
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