E. Samei et Kj. Kearfott, A LIMITED BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT-FUNDED HUMAN RADIATION EXPERIMENTS, Health physics, 69(6), 1995, pp. 885-891
From the early 1940's thousands of U.S. citizens have been the subject
s of federally supported scientific experiments that involved the admi
nistration of ionizing radiation or radioactive substances, Recently,
many questions have been raised regarding the nature, scientific value
, and ethics of these experiments. Although the results of many of the
early human experiments involving radiation have been crucial to the
establishment of nuclear medicine, radiation therapy, and radiological
protection standards, the underlying ethical basis for a small number
of these studies is being questioned, A thorough analysis of these st
udies and their ethical basis is beyond the scope of this article, Rat
her, in order to quickly provide the health physics community with som
e of the available resources in the open literature, a list of bibliog
raphic citations of the 47 studies primarily funded by the Atomic Ener
gy Commission (AEC) and other predecessors of the Department of Energy
is presented and briefly summarized, A classification scheme for the
human radiation experiments is also developed.