this is scary
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Fri Feb 24, 2006 6:16 PM GMT
By Alan Elsner
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Doctors and psychologists at the U.S. military prison in Guantanamo Bay are taking part in practices, including force feeding, that violate medical ethics, say ethicists and medical associations.
Doctors at Guantanamo have inserted feeding tubes through the noses of prisoners on hunger strike. Psychiatrists and psychologists have observed harsh interrogations and advised interrogators on ways to persuade detainees to cooperate.
"These are fundamental violations. When doctors join the military, their medical ethics should not change. Medical personnel should not participate in any procedures harmful to the patient," said Leonard Rubinstein, executive director of Physicians for Human Rights.
The United States acknowledges using some aggressive interrogation techniques but insists it does not torture of detainees. But a U.N. human rights team this month said the treatment of detainees "amounted to torture."
The United States is holding around 500 suspected terrorists at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. Many have been there for over four years, all but a handful without charges.
The debate over medical ethics has heated up with the recent disclosure that hunger strikers at Guantanamo had been forcibly tied down in "restraint chairs" for force feedings. Some detainees said the feedings had been made intentionally painful to break the hunger strike.
Defense Department officials denied this, and said they were acting to keep the prisoners alive.
In a letter last month to David Nicholl, chairman of the British Medical Association's ethics committee, the chief medical officer at Guantanamo, Capt. John Edmondson, said the detainees' motivation was to protest their confinement rather than to kill themselves. He said his staff was "providing nutritional supplementation on a voluntary basis to detainees who wish to protest their confinement by not taking oral nourishment."
Officers said they were proud that not a single detainee had died at the prison and were determined to maintain that record.
ORGANIZATIONS SLOW TO ACT
U.S. professional medical associations have been slow to take a position on the ethics of such practices as force feeding and coercive interrogations but that is now changing.
The American Medical Association has said that medical ethics preclude physician participation in the intentional infliction of physical or mental harm.
On force feeding, the AMA says: "When a patient is capable of forming an unimpaired or rational judgment concerning the consequences of refusing nourishment, a physician should respect such a refusal."
Steven Miles of the University of Minnesota's Center for Bioethics said medical organizations had been reluctant to speak out for fear of alienating politicians whose support they need on issues such as malpractice reform, but the flow of news from Guantanamo had forced their hand.
"There's enough smoke now to suggest that bad things are happening," he said.
Last October, the Pentagon flew several leaders of U.S. medical organizations to Guantanamo to dispel their concerns but allowed them no access to detainees.
A month later, the assembly of the American Psychiatric Association endorsed a statement that psychiatrists "should not participate or serve as consultants for coercive interrogations involving methods such as degradation, threats, isolation, imposition of fear, humiliation, sleep deprivation" and others widely reported to have been used at Guantanamo.
And an American Psychological Association task force last year said psychologists could ethically serve in consultative roles to interrogations as long as they stayed within the bounds of their professional code of conduct which forbids torture or cruel, inhumane or degrading treatment.
reuters
Monday, February 27, 2006
Sunday, February 26, 2006
Saturday, February 25, 2006
the twelve types of medical student...
as satirized/summarised by an american former medical student-now doctor. the question is,
which type are you?
which type are you?
Friday, February 24, 2006
Thursday, February 23, 2006
freedom
'But what is Freedom? Rightly understood,
A universal licence to be good'
Hartley Coleridge (1796 - 1849).
Taken from 'Sing Freedom!', edited by Judith Nicholls - a lovely anthology, one that everyone should read.
A universal licence to be good'
Hartley Coleridge (1796 - 1849).
Taken from 'Sing Freedom!', edited by Judith Nicholls - a lovely anthology, one that everyone should read.
Tuesday, February 21, 2006
office olympics
office olympics
an interesting idea from nhs direct. i suggest they go further and recommend that ppl (esp the young) should avoid trudging to work grumpily each morning, and imagine their whole journey to work as a multi-stationed endurance course, and add as many obstacles (read bus/train/tube changes) as possible. preferably each at a slight distance from each other, allowing for sprinting/skipping/free running/whatever-takes-their-fancy to get from A to B.
an interesting idea from nhs direct. i suggest they go further and recommend that ppl (esp the young) should avoid trudging to work grumpily each morning, and imagine their whole journey to work as a multi-stationed endurance course, and add as many obstacles (read bus/train/tube changes) as possible. preferably each at a slight distance from each other, allowing for sprinting/skipping/free running/whatever-takes-their-fancy to get from A to B.
Monday, February 20, 2006
The JCB song
just for the sake of the unparalleled cuteness of it all. may the animator go forth and produce even cuter pieces of wonderment that would put smiles on faces the world over.
truely brilliant video of the jcb song
truely brilliant video of the jcb song
Sunday, February 19, 2006
Sunday 19th February 2006 - 1st ever blog
hello and welcome to Zazika's take!
all those random yet interesting things i find, and detours i take as i wander through the net shall find a home here. those random, probably useless, but nonetheless fascinating lesser known facts i discover in my studies will also feature (e.g. newborns sneeze to get the amniotic fluid out of their cute little noses - and there was me thinking they were cold...).
my own thoughts may also make an occasional public appearance.
Cinnamon Cleans the Breath
not only does it taste great, it kills bugs too!
A Brew for Teeth—and the Rest of You
another excuse i'll use to have my cup of tea!
peace out
Zazika
all those random yet interesting things i find, and detours i take as i wander through the net shall find a home here. those random, probably useless, but nonetheless fascinating lesser known facts i discover in my studies will also feature (e.g. newborns sneeze to get the amniotic fluid out of their cute little noses - and there was me thinking they were cold...).
my own thoughts may also make an occasional public appearance.
Cinnamon Cleans the Breath
not only does it taste great, it kills bugs too!
A Brew for Teeth—and the Rest of You
another excuse i'll use to have my cup of tea!
peace out
Zazika
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