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Lifts Ban on Testing
Drugs on Mentally Ill
By Nicholas Riccardi
LOS ANGELES, CA-Los Angeles County's mental health department
has quietly lifted its four-year ban on the testing of psychotropic
drugs on severely disabled people in its care. At the same time,
officials are drawing up procedures to screen anticipated proposals
for research on the drugs, which are used to treat mental disorders.
The more than 2,000 patients affected are mostly impoverished
people afflicted with severe schizophrenia whom a court has ruled
unable to care for themselves and placed under the county's control
as "conservatees." Scattered in nursing homes, board
and care facilities and convalescent or state hospitals, conservatees
can be forced to take certain drugs and lose their right to vote.
While the mental health department believes it has the power to
lift the ban on its own, it has asked the county's lawyers for
an opinion on whether the Board of Supervisors is required to
set the guidelines for permissible drug trials. That opinion
is forthcoming. (What freedom does someone enjoy if they can
be forced to become a guinea pig by a government that is supposed
to be protecting you! WFI Editor)
County officials acknowledge that permitting medical tests on
conservatees is highly controversial, especially given the heightened
national debate over testing. They say their policy will be extremely
restrictive, most likely allowing only research that would not
be done against conservatees' will. The blanket ban on tests
on county conservatees - established after the death of a private
conservatee in a clinical trial at Camarillo State Hospital -
may actually prevent them from receiving benefits of psychotropic
drugs that are not yet on the market, Marvin Southard, the director
of the Dept. of Mental Health. (A patient might not want a new
drug that is not yet on the market, and which is still in early
trial stages. Stage 1 trials are absolute crapshoots, because
those are the first human tests. Worst of all, is the discussion
of testing drugs on the mentally incompetent, the least capable
of defending themselves. How many Nazis are in the Los Angeles
Dept. of Mental Health? More than you might imagine, because
to be a Nazi doesn't take membership in the Nazi party, it means
being a bone-deep fascist, someone who believes that they are entitled to deprive other human beings of their freedom of choice. WFI Editor)
"We want to support our conservatees and our clients' rights
to participate in something we believe in is in the best interests,"
Southard said. "And at the same time we want to avoid anything
that approaches exploitation. (What is usually left out of these
stories is the fact that behind tests are pharmaceutical firms
anxious to find human test subjects, especially those that are
not really free, like prison inmates, the mentally ill, and they
pay the institutions big money for the opportunity for access
to these captive communities. WFI Editor).
But the county's move has sparked an outcry among some mental
health professionals and activists who point out that state law
bans such tests on children or prisoners because they cannot give
truly independent, informed consent to procedures that can carry
grave medical risks. "These are people who cannot choose
their own [approved] psychotropic medicine from those that are
available from the FDA," said Alexander Capron, a USC professor
who sits on a national bioethics panel. This seems to me to be
a real exploitation of people's medical status.
Because of those concerns, Orange and San Diego counties do not
permit drug testing on conservatees, although apparently no agency
tracks which California counties do allow it. Ron Schraiber,
the Los Angeles County mental health department's consumer advocate,
has spent time in mental institutions himself and also opposes
lifting the ban. (Is it really wise to hire people who have been
IN mental institutions, to run mental institutions?
Many psychiatrists became interested in their field because of
their own mental handicaps, so it makes one question the judgment
of many of the people in the field of psychiatry. Maybe, just
maybe, it's time to stop allowing the lunatics to run the asylum.
WFI Editor).
"There's an inherent pressure of being in a total institution
when an individual is dependent on institutional staff for all
their needs and freedom," said Schraiber. "That essentially
precludes voluntary consent." And although mental health
officials say their agency will be up to the task, opponents also
argue that the mental health department's unit that is charged
with taking care of conservatees, the office of the public guardian,
is too internally troubled to have its responsibilities expanded.
"The public guardian doesn't carry out its responsibility
toward the people it's protecting," said Harold Shabo, supervising
judge of the mental health court which hears conservatee cases.
"Experimentation just adds another level of risk."
Shabo has complained about delays in the office transferring
paperwork to the public defender, which represents conservatees
in court. The result is that patients can be trapped in mental
institutions for weeks.
In an indication of the divisiveness of the issue, the mental
health committee that lifted the ban did so in a 4-3 vote Nov.
16 after months of debate. Even opponents of the action of the
committee praised the majority for issuing a policy loaded with
safeguards that would have to be met before any testing is approved.
"A clear line of 'no' is the best protection for clients
in my view," said Mary Mahon Fordes, a member of the human
subject research committee who voted against the plan. But, she
added, "If it's going to be done, I think there's a lot of
very good stuff built into the proposal. It's going to be very
hard to get anything through here." (Unless, of course,
the pharmaceuticals offer the Mental Health Department so much
money, it's an offer they can't refuse. WFI Editor)
Southard said the vote voids the ban and his agency is researching
whether it can adopt the recommendations of its own human subject
research committee as the requirements that must be met before
research can proceed on any conservatee or whether the Board of
Supervisors would have to approve such policies. Southard stressed
that, under the proposed regulations, research would have to clear
several hurdles before it was approved before it was approved
by the department. Then the researcher would have to go to court
and persuade a judge to allow the procedure. The patient would
have to consent to the process - and Southard said he believes
some conservatees are capable of giving consent, even if their
functions are impaired in other areas. (Of course, the notion
of a mental illness itself suggests some perception irregularities,
that could be taken advantage of, and will be taken advantage
of, by well-meaning researchers, to the disadvantage of the clients.
WFI Editor)
Among the regulations are provisos that no experiment can use
solely county conservatees as subjects and that the test must
be judged to be beneficial for the patient. (In reality, these
provisos are being offered to allay concerns about the prudence
of testing drugs on mental patients, and once a regulation is
in place, there is always an official of the bureaucracy with
the authority to waive the regulation. In fact, every regulation
of every agency can be waived by the appropriate government bureaucrat,
that gives the government full operational ability, while falsely
re-assuring those who have correct and rightful concerns for the
disabled, who are put in the custody of the state TO PROTECT THEM.
WFI Editor). "We're not going to take a cohort
of Metropolitan [State Hospital] clients and have that be the
focus of research for a new drug," Southard said. "I
wouldn't do that." (Yes, but all positions are somewhat
temporary in our highly mobile society, and for all we know, Mr.
Southard and his good intentions could be promoted, or move to
another profession, and suddenly someone else has his position
of power, who has completely different opinions. It's happened
before
WFI Editor)
Still, the county's mental health commission, which advises the
Board of Supervisors, has asked to review the mental health department's
proposed regulations. And an aide to county Supervisor Mike Antonovich,
who is active in mental health matters, said she expects the issue
to come before the Board. The county's move comes at a time of
heightened scrutiny over medical research and patient consent.
Scandals have occurred recently involving tests done on minors
by Stanford University scientists, research on uninformed patients
at the Veterans Administration hospital in West Los Angeles and
a report from the National Bioethics Commission that cautions
against exploiting vulnerable subjects. (The veterans literally
put their lives at risk for the safety of their homeland, and
the way they get treated is the government uses them as guinea
pigs in drug tests! We may not agree with the policies of the
government when it sends soldiers overseas, but the men are trained
to do their duty, and if soldiers had to fight in improper wars,
it is wrong to blame the soldier; it is the government that
is to blame, and the mob-dynamic of republican politics. WFI
Editor).
Part of the reason, critics say, is that pharmaceutical companies
are raking in increasingly higher profits from new medications
and need new test subjects, and scientists may be motivated by
money those companies pay for their research. Other tensions
are also at work, said Leonard Glantz, a lawyer and ethics specialist
at Boston University's School of Public Health. "There's
been an increasing sense of mental illness as biological
Advocates are feeling very strongly that more people should be
protected. Scientists are thinking that if we do more research
we could find better treatments."
Conservatees are a desirable population for researchers because
they are usually in the same place and can easily be monitored,
experts say. Conservatees can be placed under the control of
private parties, such as friends or families. The county's conservatees
generally have no such people able (or willing) to care for them
and are entrusted to the government. (They are also poor,
which puts them at an additional disadvantage because they don't
have the ability to seek the proper legal remedies when violated,
which reduces the risk to drug researchers; just another example
of the helplessness of the people the county has now decided to
exploit as drug test subjects. WFI Editor)
In 1993, a private conservatee who was participating in a drug
trial at Camarillo State Hospital died as a result of a self-administered
aspirin dose. Although its conservatees were not involved in
the research, Los Angeles County's public guardian investigated
the incident, and alarmed at procedural problems at the hospital,
placed a ban on county conservatees participating in drug tests.
But the office of the public guardian has asked the human subject
research committee to examine whether the ban should be lifted.
"We felt that, because it's been such a heated topic, we
should look at it," said Barbara Kubik, chief of conservatee
services. "There's nothing on the back burner or in the
hopper" in terms of drug trials that spurred the request,
she added. (When a bureaucrat tells you there is no project in
the works, it is a sure sign that there IS a project under
consideration. A rule of thumb is that when bureaucrats make
flat out declarations of facts, we must understand that most likely,
the truth is the exact opposite. WFI Editor)
Dr. Marcus Weise, the chairman of the county's human subject research
committee, said a blanket ban on research may be unethical. He
cited the drug clozapine, which in tests before the ban greatly
improved the conditions of some schizophrenic county conservatees.
(Even if a drug helps someone, it is not fair to test it on them
when they cannot really give informed consent, and they should
be receiving tested, approved drugs, that have known side-effects,
instead of subjecting them to the possibility of horrific side-effects
on untested drugs, understand Dr. Mengele? WFI Editor).
"For the next clozapine, automatically public guardian conservatees
would never be allowed to [benefit from] it," Weise said.
"They shouldn't be automatically and positively excluded
from it."
But opponents are skeptical of that rationale, noting that such
medicines are few and far between. Out of hundreds of psychotropic
drugs tested, experts say, only a handful show promise. "Beware
of people who say I'm only doing this for your own good,"
said Edward Opton, an attorney and psychologist who sits on the
state's Committee for the Protection of Human Subjects. "Any
drug might benefit anyone. But when you're looking for new psychotropic
drugs you're looking for a needle in a haystack."
Many arguments against the county's move center around one institution
where research could begin, Metropolitan State Hospital in Norwalk,
where more than 200 county conservatees are housed. The hospital
has repeatedly been the subject of complaints by advocates and
medical examiners of improper use of restraints on patients.
But Weise said Metropolitan and other state hospitals may not
be able to meet the criteria of the proposed testing policy, which
requires the level of care in the conservatee's institution to
be equal to that under the proposed tests. That, Weise said,
is to ensure that a conservatee does not feel pressured to join
a test merely to get better treatment.
But another oft-criticized institution remains inextricably joined
to the proposal - the office of the public guardian. The unit
has been expanding its ranks this year, and officials said services
are improving. (Officials and bureaucrats ALWAYS say "services
are improving," if they're not in total denial, and insist
that services don't need improving at all. WFI Editor)
Until recently, its overworked staff was able to see conservatees
only twice a year, said Kubik, the chief of conservatee services.
Now the agency seeks to visit its conservatees four times a year.
Even with new hires, caseloads are still double the level Kubik
said is ideal, and the tight labor market is making it tougher
to find qualified workers.
Still, Kubik said that any conservatees who would be research
subjects would be carefully watched. "We'd make darn sure
we had sufficient personnel to monitor the people in these programs,"
said Kubik, adding that she expects the number of conservatees
affected would be small. (The grotesque aspect of this assertion
is that an office that now can barely see each of its clients
twice IN A YEAR'S TIME, is going to be supervising the testing
of drugs on those clients. Anyone with an ear for a con should
hear that this assurance is false. The office of public guardian
does not now have, nor will it have in the future, the resources
necessary to fulfill its normal responsibilities, and monitor
mentally ill human drug test subjects properly. WFI Editor)
Advocates are skeptical. Opton, for example, cites complaints
last year about a two-month backlog in the public guardian's accounting
of its conservatee's finances. A county audit found the problems
were caused by problems in communications from the public defender's
office. "If they can't even keep track of the money incoming,"
Opton asked, "can they do a good job, or even an adequate
job, of making these decisions for these patients?" Pamela Lew, an attorney at Protection and Advocacy, said she is troubled by the fact that the public guardian is part of the Mental Health Department and may not be able to look out for the conservatees. "There isn't anybody advocating for the best interest of the patient," she said, adding that overworked public defenders who are unfamiliar with medical procedures may not be able to adequately represent possible research subjects in court. Weise, the head of the Human Subjects Research Committee, said his group grappled with these issues for months and heard testimony from experts on both sides of the issue. "God has not spoken to us in the night," he said, "but we have really struggled with this issue to come up with something besides no research." SOURCE: Excerpted from the 29 November, 1999, edition of the Los Angeles Times, Orange County Edition, from an article entitled, "County Lifts Ban on Testing Drugs on Mentally Ill." Reprinted in the public service of the national interest of the American people.(WFI EDITOR: It is absolutely immoral to exploit helpless individuals with impaired perception, for purposes of drug testing and research, after which drug companies will reap in a fortune, while the human subjects receive nothing except "treatment." This proves out the truly low esteem the bureaucrats of the republic hold the American people in, they seeing Americans who are poor enough to fall into their control, as potential human drug testing subjects. When is the tide going to be turned around, and people in America realize that the Federal and state and local governments are NOT their friends, who will look out for their best interests. The republic corrupted the ancient form of government that provided that protection, and now the people are prey to every local tycoon. The lifting of the ban against drug testing on mentally ill patients represents a crime against humanity. It's like approving drug testing on children. There is no way to dress this crime up, and make it acceptable. And, of course, Los Angeles County is one of the largest counties in the United States, so you can be sure that the same practices are going on in other counties of this country.) |
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