6. Skin Testing on Prison Inmates
The late Dr. Albert Kligman is fondly remembered for having invented Retin-A, the popular acne medication, but his legacy is also unfortunately stained by allegations that several experiments he conducted in the Holmesburg Prison in Philadelphia were unethical. Kligman was invited to the facility in 1951, when inmates were suffering from an athlete’s foot outbreak, and the dermatologist quickly grabbed the opportunity to turn the prison into a product-testing laboratory. The experiments, involving deodorants, skin creams, and hair products, among others, seemed harmless, but congressional hearings and national publicity later revealed that mind-altering drugs, radioactive substances, and various pathogens were also tested on paid prisoners. A case filed by hundreds of former inmates in 2000 failed to prosper because the statute of limitations was found to have expired.
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