Source: Belfast Telegraph.co.uk
Pharmaceutical companies paid millions of pounds to former Communist East Germany
to use more that 50,000 patients in state-run hospitals as unwitting
guinea pigs for drug tests in which several people died, it was revealed
today.
An investigation by the German magazine Der Spiegel said international conglomerates such as Bayer, Hoechst, Roche,
Schering and Sandoz carried out more than 600 tests on patients, mostly
without their knowledge, at hospitals and clinics in the former
Communist state.
The companies were said to have paid the
regime the equivalent of €400,000 (£338,000) per test. Schering, a
concern which now belongs to Bayer, was said to have offered East Germany the equivalent of €3m to carry out a series of tests at an East Berlin hospital.
Der Spiegel said it gained the information from Stasi
secret police files and hitherto unpublished East German health
ministry and pharmaceutical institute records. Western pharmaceutical
companies are known to have turned to cash-strapped Eastern Bloc
countries in their search for human guinea pigs after the 1960s
thalidomide scandal which obliged them to carry out rigorous tests on
their products before they could be sold.
In the West, the
law stipulated that any patients taking part in such tests had to be
fully informed of the risks involved. However, in East Germany such
restrictions were waived or “modified” in an increasingly desperate
effort to procure enough hard currency to rescue an ailing economy.
The
records show a concern which now belongs to Roche tested the
“blood-booster” Epo on 30 premature babies. Bayer was also revealed to
have tested Nimodipin – a drug designed to improve blood circulation in
the brain– on a group of alcoholics who were suffering from such acute
delirium that they could not give their consent.
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