Numerous human radiation experiments have been performed in the United States, many of which were funded by various U.S. government agencies such as the
United States Department of Defense, the
United States Atomic Energy Commission, and the
United States Public Health Service. Also involved were several universities, most notably
Vanderbilt University involved in several of them. The experiments included: • directly
injecting plutonium and other radioactive elements to mostly terminal patients without their consent • feeding radioactive traces to children • enlisting doctors to administer radioactive iron to impoverished pregnant women • exposing U.S. soldiers and prisoners to high levels of radiation In 1927, five-year-old
Vertus Hardiman and nine other children from
Lyles Station, Indiana, were severely irradiated during a medical experiment conducted at the local county hospital. To get parental consent, the experiment was misrepresented as a new therapy for the scalp fungus known as
ringworm. Many of the children suffered long-term effects, but Hardiman's were the most pronounced. The radiation disfigured his head and left a large, open wound on the side of his skull. The parents of the children met with a local lawyer and filed a lawsuit against the hospital, but the hospital was found not liable. of the Johns Hopkins Berman Institute of Bioethics. One of the primary motivating factors behind his decision to create ACHRE was a step taken by his newly appointed Secretary of Energy,
Hazel O'Leary, one of whose first actions on taking the helm of the
United States Department of Energy was to announce a new openness policy for the department. The new policy led almost immediately to the release of over 1.6 million pages of classified records. These records made clear that since the 1940s, the
Atomic Energy Commission had been sponsoring tests on the effects of radiation on the human body. American citizens who had checked into hospitals for a variety of ailments were secretly injected, without their knowledge, with varying amounts of
plutonium and other radioactive materials.
Ebb Cade was an unwilling participant in medical experiments that involved injection of 4.7 micrograms of plutonium on 10 April 1945 at
Oak Ridge, Tennessee. This experiment was under the supervision of
Harold Hodge. Most patients thought it was "just another injection," but the secret studies left enough radioactive material in many of the patients' bodies to induce life-threatening conditions. Such experiments were not limited to hospital patients, but included other populations such as those set out above, e.g., orphans fed irradiated milk, children injected with radioactive materials, and prisoners in Washington and Oregon state prisons. Much of the experimentation was carried out in order to assess how the human body metabolizes radioactive materials, information that could be used by the Departments of Energy and Defense in
Cold War defense and attack planning. ACHRE's final report was also a factor in the Department of Energy establishing an Office of Human Radiation Experiments (OHRE) that assured publication of DOE's involvement, by way of its predecessor, the AEC, in Cold War radiation research and experimentation on human subjects. The final report issued by the ACHRE can be found at the Department of Energy's website. ==Experiments performed in the United Kingdom==