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Aids Tots Used as 'Guinea Pigs'
By DOUGLAS MONTERO
New York Post, {FRONT PAGE}
February 29, 2004 -- The state Health Department has
launched a probe into potentially dangerous drug
research conducted on HIV-infected infants and children
at a Manhattan foster-care agency, The Post has learned.
Some 50 foster kids were used as "guinea pigs"
in 13 experiments with high doses of AIDS medications at
Manhattan's Incarnation Children's Center, sources said.
Most of the ICC experiments were funded by federal
grants and in some cases, pharmaceutical companies.
They used city foster children, who were sent to the
Catholic Archdiocese-run facility by the Administration
for Children's Services.
ICC was involved in 36 different experiments,
according to the National Institutes of Health Web site.
One study researched "HIV Wasting Syndrome,"
which studied how a child's body changes when his
medication is altered.
A handful of the experiments involved combining up to six
AIDS drugs - so-called "cocktails" - in children
as young as 3 months, and another explores the reaction of
not one, but two doses of the measles vaccine in kids ages 6
to 7 months.
Other studies tested the "safety," "tolerance" and
"toxicity" of AIDS drugs.
"They are torturing these kids, and it is nothing short
of murder," said Michael Ellner, a minister and president of
Health Education AIDS Liaison, an advocacy group for HIV
parents.
Biochemist Dr. David Rasnick, a visiting scholar at the
University of California at Berkeley and an expert in AIDS
medication, was outraged because the drugs, alone or
combined, have "acute toxicity which could be
fatal."
He said the drugs' side effects include severe liver
damage, cancerous tumors, severe anemia, muscle wasting,
severe and life-threatening rashes and "buffalo
hump," where fatty tissues accumulate behind the
neck.
Housed in a former convent and run by the Archdiocese of
New York's Catholic Charities, the foster-care agency
described the experiments on its own Web site, which was
abruptly shut down after The Post began making
inquiries.
Archdiocese spokesman Joseph Zwilling said experiments at
ICC were halted in 2002. He said he did not know why.
Zwil- ling also said he did not know if any children had
died.
An ACS spokeswoman said the agency hasn't approved any
new experiments since 2000 because the "risks
outweighed the benefits." She declined to explain
further. That agency is also reviewing its files on the
case.
Jacqueline Hoerger was a pediatric nurse at ICC from 1989
to 1993 and said the experimentation was going on even back
then. "We were taught that any symptom we saw was
HIV-related," said Hoerger, 43. "The vomiting, diarrhea,
wasting syndrome, the neurological side effects - they were
dying. There was death."
She didn't think doctors were doing anything wrong,
however, until years later, when she tried to adopt two of
the foster girls. When she refused to give the kids the
center's high-powered AIDS cocktails for fear it was making
them sicker, ACS had social workers take the children away
from her.
Advocates for children question the ethics of
experimenting on foster kids - especially those too
young to know what's happening to them.
"The most vulnerable, disadvantaged children are
being exploited by powerful entities and used as guinea
pigs as if they were not human beings," said Vera
Sharav from the Alliance for Human Research and
Protection.
The tests were conducted by doctors from Columbia
Presbyterian Medical Center, which was affiliated with
ICC until 2002 and reaped the financial benefits of the
research.
"Through these trials, children at the ICC
outpatient clinic gained access to state-of-the-art
treatments for HIV," said Annie Bayne, a Columbia
spokeswoman.
ACS policy states it seeks parental consent before a
child is enrolled in a study. If the parents cannot be
found, ACS's medical and legal divisions, and its
commissioner, must all approve.
The condition, however, is that the experiment
"offer each participating child a significant
potential benefit, a concomitant minimal risk of injury
or harm," ACS spokeswoman MacLean Guthrie said.
Fire Commissioner Nicholas Scoppetta, who headed ACS
at the time of the experiments, refused comment.
Officials at ICC, which was established in 1989 to
house and care for HIV-infected "boarder
babies" left stranded in city hospitals, refused
to talk to The Post.
I Took Girls Out of Hell - and City Stole
Them Back
By DOUGLAS MONTERO
February 29, 2004 -- Jacqueline Hoerger will never forget
the raid of her Nyack home by foster-care social workers who
snatched the two HIV-positive sisters she was trying to
adopt. Her crime: She was accused of neglect by the girls'
doctor because she refused to give them a potentially
dangerous cocktail of high-powered AIDS medications that she
felt made them sicker.
Hoerger, a pediatric nurse who spent two years as the
girls' foster mother, got the children from Manhattan's
Incarnation Children's Center, a foster home for
HIV-infected kids, where she worked from 1989 to 1993.
There, she watched an array of researchers experiment on
HIV-infected children, some as young as 3 months.
She did her job and figured the doctors at Columbia
Presbyterian Medical Center, which is affiliated with ICC,
knew what they were doing. It wasn't until she was allowed
to take the sisters, ages 6 and 4, home in late 1998 that
she began questioning the doctors and suspected they were
conducting research.
"They were given to me as total wrecks," Hoerger
said, describing how the oldest was hyperactive and
sickly and the youngest was lethargic, extremely
overweight and could barely walk.
She learned the drug cocktails were highly toxic and
mostly untested in children after listening to a speech
by Dr. Philip Incao, of Denver, who travels across the
country questioning current HIV medical practices.
She decided to wean them off the drugs with Incao's
help.
That's when the brow-beating began. The
Administration for Children's Services, which has
admitted to allowing researchers to conduct medical
experiments on HIV-infected children, and the Catholic
Home Bureau, the adoption arm of the Archdiocese of New
York, became the doctors' enforcers.
When Hoerger refused to relent, social workers came
and took the girls away.
ACS refused to comment about the case, citing the
privacy of the two sisters.
"I gave my blood, sweat and tears to help these
children, and we turned them into real kids," said
Hoerger, who cared for the girls with her husband, a
schoolteacher. "They were just taken away - two healthy
kids - taken away.
"I spent a couple of days in total shock," said
Hoerger, who despite her run-in the ACS maintains her
license as a nurse. "I didn't do anything for two days
- I was in total, complete shock."
That was in 2000. She hasn't seen the kids since.
Defenseless Kids' Guardian Agency Won't Come
Clean
By DOUGLAS MONTERO
February 29, 2004 -- THE city's Administration for
Children's Services is so busy protecting the privacy of
foster kids it won't talk about how those kids were used as
HIV guinea pigs.
My questions were simple:
How many HIV foster kids have they allowed to be used
in experiments?
Whom could they call for relief if researchers
prodded too hard, hurt them, made them cry or made them
sick?
These defenseless kids couldn't run home and cry to
mommy - their "mother" is the ACS bureaucracy.
From 1998 until 2002, ACS allowed HIV-positive foster
kids to be used by scientists trying to solve the
mysteries of the scourge illness. About 50 of them at
Manhattan's Incarnation Children's Center were used as
guinea pigs in the late 1990s.
Scientists push the limit - that's how they
discovered penicillin, a researcher once told me.
And that's fine when we're talking about kids whose
parents are looking over the doctor's shoulder.
The city's Public Advocate's Office, which looks over
the shoulder of ACS, said it was surprised to hear of
the policy that allowed HIV infected children to be used
as guinea pigs.
"We're concerned because clinical trials are risky
and we're concerned ACS just unilaterally signed up
these kids," said Advocate's Office spokeswoman Anat
Jacobson.
Vera Sharav, the president of the city's Alliance for
Human Research Protection, who reviewed 10 of the
studies, said some of the studies were purely
experimental.
One experiment states the combination of two drugs
"has not been approved for use in children and the doses
for the combination of the two drugs has not been
studied in children." Another study with three drugs
flatly states, "This study also evaluates the long-term
safety and tolerance of these different drugs."
"This is not for the children's treatment, it's to
test experimental drugs," said Sharav, who questioned
ACS's decision to give consent for children whose
parents can't.
On paper, the 1998 ACS policy sounds strict.
The question is whether ACS's case workers, who
oversee 14,000 kids, were in a position to hear the
cries of the HIV guinea pigs at night - when there's
only a nurse or a $10.75-an-hour Spanish-speaking matron
around.
In an e-mailed statement, ACS spokeswoman MacLean
Guthrie says that over the past decade a "great number"
of advancements have been made in HIV treatment that
prolongs the life of infected children.
"Our goal is to ensure that children in foster care
have the same access as other children to these
treatments," she said.
OK, now show us the proof. Reveal the fate of all
the foster children involved in the secret HIV
experiments.
We don't want their names, Social Security numbers or
dates of birth - we just want to know how many of them
came out alive.
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