Not Dead Yet Statement on Growth Attenuation Experimentation
January 6, 2007
Contacts: Diane Coleman or Stephen Drake
708-209-1500, exts. 11 and 29
708-420-0539 (cell)
Not Dead Yet, a national disability rights group dealing with
medical and bioethics issues involving euthanasia, reacted today
to the public debate about the so-called growth attenuation
invasive medical experimentation performed on a young girl in
Washington State. These procedures rendered her sterile, prevented
any sort of puberty and will keep the girl the size she is now for
the rest of her life.
We are saddened but not surprised by the fact that this was
publicized and met with a great deal of public approval, said
Diane Coleman, founder of Not Dead Yet. The public is willing to
sanction the murders of disabled children by their parents, so
its hardly surprising they would rush to the support of parents
and their medical partners in a matter like this.
Coleman points out that the series of surgeries and drug regimens
would never have been given to a non-disabled female for any
reason.
But more of these practices are threatened. When a report of the
Washington case was published in the Archives of Pediatric and
Adolescent Medicine, some so-called critics of the procedures said
the only way we can evaluate the outcome is to do more
research, which we presume to mean more experimentation on young
women. Thats unacceptable, said Coleman. We simply need to
call a halt to it.
Stephen Drake, research analyst for Not Dead Yet, is not surprised
to hear there were medical professionals willing to perform such
drastic measures on a young girl.
As a child, I had many health problems that continued until the
age of 12, said Drake. By the time I was 11 or 12 I was feeling
good enough to worry about other things, like my height (Drake is
5 1). I was tired of always being the shortest guy in my class
and feeling bad around it. My parents took me to a specialist who
determined that my health issues probably had depressed my growth
and mentioned the possibility of growth hormone. My parents vetoed
the idea, since I was finally happy and healthy. They figured I
didnt need any new unknown health risks introduced into my life.
They were right and it didnt really take me long to see it their
way.
Not Dead Yet calls for a total ban on this procedure and similar
ones, no matter what ethics committees think of them. Ethics
committees are not a substitute for the constitutionally-
guaranteed right of due process. In fact, they often act as an
end-run around those protections. Ethics Committees often say
they strive for diversity in their membership, but they have
historically excluded representation from the disability community
about whom they are making life and death decisions, said
Coleman.
Source: Not Dead Yet
7521 Madison St.
Forest Park, IL 60130
708-209-1500
http://www.notdeadyet.org ________________________________________________________________
For more bioethical news issues, see:
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