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(www.infowars.com)
ALERT: EPA TO ALLOW PESTICIDE TESTING ON
ORPHANS & MENTALLY HANDICAPPED CHILDREN
Organic Consumers | November 17, 2005
Send a letter to
EPA here!
Forward this alert to friends and colleagues
Public Comment Period Closes
December 12, 2005
Public comments are now being accepted by the Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA) on its newly proposed federal regulation
regarding the testing of chemicals and pesticides on human subjects.
On August 2, 2005, Congress had mandated the EPA create a rule that
permanently bans chemical testing on pregnant women and children.
But the EPA's newly proposed rule, misleadingly titled "Protections
for Subjects in Human Research," puts industry profits ahead of
children's welfare. The rule allows for government and industry
scientists to treat children as human guinea pigs in chemical
experiments in the following situations:
Children who "cannot be reasonably consulted," such as those that
are mentally handicapped or orphaned newborns may be tested on. With
permission from the institution or guardian in charge of the
individual, the child may be exposed to chemicals for the sake of
research.
Parental consent forms are not necessary for testing on children who
have been neglected or abused.
Chemical studies on any children outside of the U.S. are acceptable.
Send a letter to EPA here!
OCA's focal concerns with this proposed rule specifically involve
the following portions of text within the EPA document (Read the
full EPA proposed rule here: PDF --- HTML):
70 FR 53865 26.408(a) "The IRB (Independent Review Board) shall
determine that adequate provisions are made for soliciting the
assent of the children, when in the judgment of the IRB the children
are capable of providing assent...If the IRB determines that the
capability of some or all of the children is so limited that they
cannot reasonably be consulted, the assent of the children is not a
necessary condition for proceeding with the research. Even where the
IRB determines that the subjects are capable of assenting, the IRB
may still waive the assent requirement..."
(OCA NOTE: Under this clause, a mentally handicapped child or infant
orphan could be tested on without assent. This violates the
Nuremberg Code, an international treaty that mandates assent of test
subjects is "absolutely essential," and that the test subject must
have "legal capacity to give consent" and must be "so situated as to
exercise free power of choice." This loophole in the rule must be
completely removed.)
70 FR 53865 26.408(c) "If the IRB determines that a research
protocol is designed for conditions or for a subject population for
which parental or guardian permission is not a reasonable
requirement to protect the subjects (for example, neglected or
abused children), it may waive the consent requirements..."
(OCA NOTE: Under the general rule, the EPA is saying it's okay to
test chemicals on children if their parents or institutional
guardians consent to it. This clause says that neglected or abused
children have unfit guardians, so no consent would be required to
test on those children. This loophole in the rule must be completely
removed.)
70 FR 53864 26.401 (a)(2) "To What Do These Regulations Apply? It
also includes research conducted or supported by EPA outside the
United States, but in appropriate circumstances, the Administrator
may, under § 26.101(e), waive the applicability of some or all of
the requirements of these regulations for research..."
(OCA NOTE: This clause is stating that the Administrator of the EPA
has the power to completely waive regulations on human testing, if
the testing is done outside of the U.S. This will allow chemical
companies to do human testing in other countries where these types
of laws are less strict. This loophole in the rule must be
completely removed.)
70 FR 53857 "EPA proposes an extraordinary procedure applicable if
scientifically sound but ethically deficient human research is found
to be crucial to EPA’s fulfilling its mission to protect public
health. This procedure would also apply if a scientifically sound
study covered by proposed § 26.221 or § 26.421--i.e., an intentional
dosing study involving pregnant women or children as subjects..."
(OCA NOTE: This clause allows the EPA to accept or conduct
"ethically deficient" studies of chemical tests on humans if the
agency deems it necessary to fulfull its mission. Unfortunately, the
EPA report sets up no criteria for making such an exception with any
particular study. This ambiguity leaves a gaping loophole in the
rule. Without specific and detailed criteria, it could be argued
that any and every study of chemical testing on humans is
"necessary." This loophole in the rule must be removed, based on
this inadequacy of criteria and definition.)
Send an email to EPA here!
Forward this alert to friends and colleagues
By mail: Send two copies of your comments to:
Public Information and Records Integrity Branch (PIRIB)
Office of Pesticide Programs
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
Mail Code: 7502C
1200 Pennsylvania Ave., NW
Washington, DC, 20460-0001
Attention: Docket ID Number OPP-2003-0132
The OCA also needs your financial support to continue working on
these important issues. Please donate today!
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