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For more
Information - This Page is referenced from
http://www.africa2000.com/INDX/bbchorizon.html
BBC Television: Horizon
THE HUMAN LABORATORY
AIR DATE 5 November 1995
NARRATOR (CHARLOTTE CORNWELL): The 60s, the age of contraception,
heralded a whole new era of liberation for women. But contraceptives
have not always meant liberation.
SYBIL SHAINWALD: They have been used as a human laboratory. They're
just expendable. Who cares if a Third World woman dies?
NARRATOR: When Norplant was released in the West recently, it seemed
to be every woman's dream. Hassle-free sex, no daily pill, and
extremely reliable protection. Six implants are surgically inserted
under the skin of the arm, where they stay for five years, releasing
a hormone to inhibit ovulation. Its developers claimed it was the
most widely-studied contraceptive to arrive on the market. But some
women have had problems. Patsy Smith had Norplant inserted after the
birth of her second child.
PATSY SMITH: Three months after having Norplant inserted I started
getting horrible headaches like gosh, it was like somebody was just
grabbing my head and just squeezing it together as tight as can be
squeezed like someone had put a bomb in there and it was going to go
off. I'd noticed that being kind of blurry and after the months it
got a little bit more blurry and things started looking like they
were on top of each other and...
NARRATOR: Doctors thought there was nothing wrong at first, but over
the next year her eyesight deteriorated. Her symptoms became
unbearable and she was taken to hospital.
PATSY SMITH: I knew something was wrong rightaway when residents and
students and people started coming in and saying can we look at your
eyes, you know, can we take a look at your eyes. They did all kinds
of tests and pictures and X-rays and ultra-sounds and odds and ends
and, oh I was scared, I was really, really scared, and then they
tell me this big word and I'm like whoa. I then asked if I would go
blind and Dr. Tang told me she couldn't make any promises that she
couldn't make me any guarantees at all, so we're just waiting.
NARRATOR: They found Patsy had pseudo-tumour cerebri, a condition
where increased fluid pressure in the brain crushes the optic nerve.
The pale circle shows a cross-section through a normal nerve, but in
Patsy's case, the fuzzy white circle shows where the nerve has been
crushed and permanently damaged.
DR. ROSA TANG: Patsy has blindness in one eye already, for practical
purposes. What damage she has now is not going to improve. She is
blind in that eye permanently and partially blind in the other. If
she has another episode this may further damage the vision she has
left and she could go completely blind.
NARRATOR: Could the Norplant have caused this? Dr. Tang became so
concerned that she wrote to every eye specialist in Texas to find
out if other women on Norplant had eyesight disorders. Out of 100
women referred to her, over 40 had blurred vision. Of these 8 had
the same condition as Patsy.
ROSA TANG: It was very surprising for me because I had not seen any
reports in the literature at this time of such a link between
Norplant and pseudo-tumour cerebri and I was surprised of the fact
that there were so many patients that seemed to be having the
condition related to Norplant. I think that there is enough out
there that there is a possibility of a link between the two that a
larger-scale study should be done if Norplant is to be continued.
PATSY SMITH: What hurts me the most is the possibility that I may go
blind and not see my children grow up. It's really scary. It's more
precious to me now than it was before. I take a lot of the things
that she does and I hold them near so that way I can remember them
if anything happened.
NARRATOR: Eyesight disorders, strokes, persistent bleeding, problems
with removal - many women have no such side-effects, but thousands
are now taking legal action in the West. Norplant was studied for 20
years in the West, but mostly in developing countries. After
standard clinical trials of Norplant had been completed,
pre-introductory clinical trials were held to assess the drug's
safety, efficacy and acceptability in local conditions. Horizon went
to Bangladesh to investigate one such trial. In the mid-80s, stories
had begun to emerge from women's health campaigns. In the slums of
Dhaka, Farida Akhter heard of women with Norplant in their arms who
were desperate to get it removed. She realised she had stumbled on a
drug trial.
FARIDA AKHTER: This started with the slum woman very secretly. They
just did not tell anybody, there was no announcement and these are
poor women, we are not meeting them every day so nobody knew.
NARRATOR: Farida Akhter was concerned about the vulnerability of
slum women and wanted to know how the tests were being run, but
no-one could tell her.
FARIDA AKHTER: We found that the family planner would just come to
them and say that you can't talk about these things to any outsider
woman, and they were afraid to talk to us, you know. They were so
afraid that sometimes they were not even sure that because we look
educated woman we might be from the government, or from the family
planning clinic itself, maybe we are just pretending to know them,
so they were not sure what they could tell us. You know, it took us
time to even get their trust to be open and they were so much
afraid, you could see in their face that they were really afraid.
NARRATOR: An earlier trial had been dropped because of public outcry
over the way Norplant was being promoted as a safe drug when it was
still under test. While Farida Akhter was investigating this trial,
her offices were raided by military government officials.
FARIDA AKHTER: They just gave me an impression that if I don't
answer questions in the right way they will do something. It was
like a frightening thing you know. They entered the gate, asked
where is the Executive Director and you know, two men coming in you
know and entered my room and sat down and there was a file and you
can see the government file, you know it's a red tape and they have
Ubinig written on it you know, and they said where do you get the
money from, what are you doing you know. They were just frightening
me, asking me look, you have the file, we have information about
you.
NARRATOR: Undeterred, she continued her investigation.
FARIDA AKHTER: I really had to find out in a detective way. We went
to the villages, we went to the slum areas. It was more than 100
woman we talked to.
NARRATOR: She found the side-effects were having a dramatic effect
on their lives.
WOMAN [SUBTITLED]: Suddenly my body became weak, quite suddenly. I
couldn't get up, couldn't take care of my children, couldn't cook. I
was bedridden.
WOMAN [SUBTITLED]: It was unbearable.
INTERVIEWER: Did you feel weak?
WOMAN: Yes, my limbs felt like collapsing, as if they were being
wrenched apart. I couldn't work or eat even. I had to lie in bed for
three months. I couldn't do anything.
INTERVIEWER: And the bleeding?
WOMAN: I was bleeding all the time.
FARIDA AKHTER: Severe bleeding makes her so weak and she even does
not have two meals a day. Many of them fainted quite often, you know
which was not the case before, so these woman were telling us we
were supposed to be very happy after taking this Norplant, but why
our life is like hell now.
NARRATOR: Then she heard of women being coerced to stay in the
trial. Once Norplant is inserted, a woman cannot remove it by
herself.
WOMAN [SUBTITLED]: I went to the clinic as often as twice a week.
But they said: 'This thing we put in you costs 5,000 takas. We'll
not remove it unless you pay this money.' Of course I feel very
angry. I went to several other doctors and offered them money to
take those things out, but they all refused. I went to three or four
of them and they said these can only be taken out by those who put
them in. They said that, if they tried they might go to jail.
INTERVIEWER: If they ask you to take Norplant again, will you?
WOMAN: That thing! Even if 14 generations of my ancestors asked me,
I shall refuse.
INTERVIEWER [SUBTITLED]: How many times did you go to the clinic and
ask them to take it out?
WOMAN: In 6 months about 12 times. Yes, about 12 times. I went to
the clinic and pleaded 'I'm having so many problems. I'm confined to
bed most of the time. Please remove it.' My health broke down
completely. I was reduced to skin and bone I had milk and eggs when
I could, but that did me no good.
WOMAN [SUBTITLED]: I felt so bad, my body felt so weak, even my
husband told me it was all very inconvenient.
INTERVIEWER: How is your relationship with your husband?
WOMAN: What else could it be? He says he'll get another wife
tomorrow. I told the doctors, 'Please take it out, I'm having so
many problems.'
INTERVIEWER: How many times did you ask to get it removed?
WOMAN: Oh, about 15 times. One day I was so desperate. I gave up
hope. I felt like throwing myself under the wheels of a car.
FARIDA AKHTER: One woman when she begged to remove it, they said
'I'm dying, please help me get it out'. They said 'OK, when you die
you inform us, we'll get it out of your dead body', so this is the
way they were treated. In a slum area people are living in a very
small, like 5ft by 7ft where at least five family members are living
and these woman are working outside. The most important resource
they have is their own healthy condition.
NARRATOR: In Bangladesh if a woman can't work, often her family
can't eat.
FARIDA AKHTER: We have many information where these woman have told
us that they have sold their cow or the goat which was the only
asset they had for treatment because she had to get well, otherwise
the family can't survive, so in order to save her, they had to, you
know, sell the cow or if they didn't want to treat her then she
suffered, so the family was suffering either way. In every sense
these people were totally torn. Their economic condition were torn,
their family happiness was totally gone.
NARRATOR: By now, news of the Norplant testing had spread. Nasreen
Huq, who has recently represented the Bangladeshi government on
women's health issues, found more disturbing aspects to the trial.
NASREEN HUQ: Participation in a clinical trial requires that the
person who is participating in that trial understands that it is a
trial, that the drug they are testing out is still in experimental
stages. This requires informed consent. This was categorically
missing.
INTERVIEWER [SUBTITLED]: When they implanted this device, did they
say it was an experimental thing that they were testing?
[WOMEN RESPONDING]: No.
NARRATOR: Perhaps most worrying of all in the drug trial,
potentially serious side-effects appeared to have been ignored.
NASREEN HUQ: Many of them told us that they had problem with
eyesight which is not recorded by the clinics which were doing the
trial on their bodies.
WOMAN [SUBTITLED]: I couldn't see. I couldn't look at things at a
distance. I had trouble focusing. You know in the village we light
oil lamps. I couldn't look at them. They looked like the sun, as red
and large as the sun. If I looked into the distance, my eyes would
water.
INTERVIEWER [SUBTITLED]: What do you mean by this dimness of the
eyes?
WOMAN: If I went out of doors, my eyes became absolutely dark. I
couldn't see anything at all as if my eyes had become affected by
blindness.
NARRATOR: In 1993 a report of the first phase of this trial
concluded: Norplant is a highly effective, safe and acceptable
method among Bangladeshi women.' It stated less than three per cent
of women reported significant medical problems, no mention of
eyesight disorders or women being refused removal.
NASREEN HUQ: I think the Norplant trials were bad science, really
shoddy science, because they were not recording the side-effects.
They were scolding women when they wanted to report side-effects,
they were scolding women if they came in at a time when they were
not scheduled to come in for a follow-up check. Their request for
removal were disregarded, were not even recorded during the trial.
So how can they tell us that it was an acceptable method for women
and that this has been scientifically tested out, you know? When
continuation rates reflect caution, reflect refusal to remove,
reflect disregard of women's concerns, reflect disregard for women's
health, how can they even accept that this has been the work of
scientists?
FARIDA AKHTER: If you look at the trial, it looks like as if this
woman are no better than a guinea pig and a guinea pig perhaps is
more expensive in the West, that's why our woman are cheaper here,
so they're easily available, they can be easily controlled and their
bodies can be easily tested.
NASREEN HUQ: When you conduct a trial in this sort of setting, you
are simply taking advantage of them being poor. You've access, cheap
access, to subjects, and you can write it up as a successful trial.
You're not in any way advancing science, you're taking advantage of
a situation in which women are poor and they don't want to have more
children, and by providing this method, or conducting this trial,
you are not in any way letting them out of their desperate
situation. I mean, I have been trained in science and I'm sorry,
this is not science.
NARRATOR: The trials were developed with funds from the US Agency
for International Development.
DR NILS DAULAIRE: We have very strict rules at AID in terms of any
experimentation that's done that certain ethical standards in terms
of human subjects have to be met, and informed consent is a critical
part of that. I've not been made personally aware of any serious
lapses in terms of informed consent of any of the AID trials. If
there are cases where women were not accorded the opportunity to
have Norplant removed, that would be a very serious breech and if
this was done with US aid funds, we would take that extremely
seriously.
INTERVIEWER: Well it has been done with US funds it appears, and we
have interviewed many women who had problems getting it removed. How
can this be, with a clinical trial which you're running with
American taxpayers' money?
NILS DAULAIRE: Well I can't answer that specific clinical trial
because that's one that I'm not personally familiar with. I can't
tell you how it can be, I can tell you that if it is, there will be
severe consequences. The organisations that would be responsible for
monitoring and overseeing these would have to clarify how any such
activities took place under their oversight.
NARRATOR: Family Health International oversaw some of the trial for
US AID. They confirmed their officials were in Bangladesh regularly,
but told Horizon: we do not believe this was very poor science. The
study was well designed and implemented in an ethical way. They
admitted there were problems with removal, but say they acted upon
them and that these were not as widespread as claimed. Yet their own
data reveals that out of 1300 women from the expanded trial, over
100 reported being refused removal. And Horizon found evidence of
problems with other US AID studies of Norplant. Testing was also
carried out in Cité Soleil in Haiti, the poorest community in the
poorest country in the western hemisphere. Since the mid-80s, there
have been 14 coups d'état and 8 changes of government.
CATHERINE MATERNOWSKA: Danger's a difficult concept to define in
Haiti. It can come from any direction at any moment. People who
stand up and indicate that they have been abused are often punished,
attacked at night, raped, hundreds of women in Cité Soleil have been
raped by the para-military forces. Often entire neighbour-hoods are
razed and burned down. This political instability makes the climate
for doing good research absolutely impossible. For many years now
I've had copious field notes on side-effects with the Norplant
method, but I've had to work essentially in secret and covertly with
Haitian women listening to their stories and their difficulties and
unable to publish it. The participants in my study could have been
in grave danger had the information been let out, the fact that they
were talking to me about their woes, about their difficulties with
the Family Planning Centre and the Norplant method. Many of the
women that I interview come from the countryside where they've lost
their land, where they've lost their income, where they've basically
taken off in search of life and within months most of them tell me,
the little saying (FRENCH) takes a turn and they say (FRENCH), which
means in searching for life the essence of life is destroyed. They
can't find food, they can't find water, they have no access to
health care, so essentially they're looking for life but they find
misery.
NARRATOR: It was while studying this community that Catherine
Maternowska came across US AID trials of Norplant and was worried at
what she found.
CATHERINE MATERNOWSKA: Side-effects in the context of Haitian
women's lives are horrible. With the Norplant users they were
extremely severe. Bleeding could go on for 18 months and what this
means in a Haitian woman's life has enormous impact. In Haiti, women
don't have cotex or tampons. That means that they have to use rags.
She needs to wash them every morning. Washing is not a simple task
at all in Haiti. She has to buy soap which cuts into her finances
for her food. To purchase water. A woman who can't actually purchase
the water needs to find the water in the nearby gutters which are
filthy, polluted and used for defecation among other things. Another
bad side-effect was headaches. A Haitian woman is not able to buy
aspirin. They live in very noisy, active, polluted, intense
communities and the headaches on top of all this were intolerable.
Many women collapsed from this method in sheer exhaustion. They
couldn't go to work, they felt so ill, they were unable to function.
NARRATOR: Just as in Bangladesh, a pattern emerged where it was
sometimes difficult for the women to get the Norplant removed.
Catherine Maternowska believed local clinics were under pressure to
keep women in the trial to make the data look good.
CATHERINE MATERNOWSKA: One woman came in with an infection in her
arm. She was a market woman, she carried heavy loads on her head and
when she came in asking to get the insert out, the doctor complained
and he complained and he looked at me and he was used to having me
in the clinic and he said, 'Oh Cathy, look at this woman, she's an
animal, she wants her Norplant out, she's an animal. She has to be
in the study and she wants it out now. What's her problem?' They
proceeded to throw her literally onto the table, lie her down so
that they could do the, take the Norplant insertion out. They threw
her head to the side like this and they gave her the anaesthesia but
before the anaesthesia had actually taken effect in her skin they
started pulling the inserts out and making incisions and pulling the
inserts out. Because the infection in her arm it looked painful, it
was red, it was swollen, and the muscle and sinew tissue had grown
over the implants, they were pulling and she was wailing, she was
why, why, and they continued calling her an animal. I think it's a
sham, it's disgusting, it appalled me that this kind of research was
going on. When someone's looking for help, looking for a solution to
their poverty and what they find is something that just makes their
poverty worse, it's a huge, huge sadness.
NARRATOR: For health workers in Cité Soleil Norplant is one of a
long line of contraceptives that have been tested in Haiti over
several decades.
ROSE-ANNE AUGUSTE [SUBTITLED): It is important for us to expose how
women in poor countries are used as guinea pigs, especially in
Haiti, so that they can test their products. Developed countries may
not even use these products because the hormone levels are too high.
But they use these in experiments on women in poor countries so that
they can regulate the levels. Fundamentally, what appears to us in
Haiti is that these people have found a laboratory here a slum
laboratory - to do whatever they want. And one of the biggest
laboratories for the American government is right here in Cité
Soleil.
INTERVIEWER: Why would your research target the poorest and the most
illiterate and the least well able to defend themselves group?
NILS DAULAIRE: You'll find that the broad portfolio of research does
not target the poorest and the most illiterate and the least able to
defend themselves. That in fact the research that's carried out is
over a broad spectrum of society because it's important to
understand the use effectiveness and the benefits, as well as the
disadvantages of certain contraceptive types among a wide variety of
groups.
INTERVIEWER: That maybe true for US AID as a whole, but I am talking
about the clinical trials of Norplant in the Third World which were
in the slums of Dhaka..
NARRATOR: At this point the interview was terminated by a State
Department official who asked for further information. Later,
Horizon was told: US AID categorically denies that poor Haitian
women were being used as human guinea pigs by the United States.
They added they were proud of their programme in Cité Soleil and
that the clinic there had been widely praised for its quality of
care. Norplant was studied in over 40 countries and apart from
Bangladesh, there are reports of problems from Indonesia, Brazil and
others, so how did the drug get approved by America's Food and Drug
Administration? Sybil Shainwald attended the only public hearing in
1989.
SYBIL SHAINWALD: The FDA approve a process In the case of Norplant
was ludicrous. It was not the standard approval process. The
auditorium was packed and it was like a dog and pony show. There
were blond women running around saying I love Norplant, I'm
satisfied with Norplant. On the other hand, the advisory committee,
which was hearing the testimony, took very little cognisance of the
fact that there were problems that had been reported throughout the
world.
NARRATOR: This application was later withdrawn due to problems with
the data. It was resubmitted and approved 8 months later with no
further public hearing.
SYBIL SHAINWALD: This was the fastest approval process that I know
of since I have been dealing with the Food and Drug Administration
and the purpose was to market this overseas to control population.
NARRATOR: Many researchers do believe that Norplant is of great
benefit, but others are critical of the US government's promotion of
a long-acting contraceptive overseas.
PROF. BETSY HARTMANN: At the highest levels in Washington,
population growth in the Third World has long been perceived as a
national security threat. During the Cold War, of course, public
fear and paranoia often focused on the nuclear bomb and in the
post-Cold War period we're having the population bomb re-emerging as
a threat. Now we're fearing these Third World peoples. Does this
mean that you promote Norplant like a weapon in the war against
population growth? Colleagues and I have looked through declassified
documents and have found, much to our horror, that at the highest
levels of government this has been an obsession. There is a national
security memorandum, for example, which talked about the great need
to control population growth in places like Brazil and the big
countries and how this population was a definite national security
threat.
NARRATOR: Norplant is at least an officially approved contraceptive.
But there are other, less regulated methods already in use.
BETSY HARTMANN: It's not just in the United States case the
government, but there are also a whole range of private foundations
that are funding the building of a population control movement.
NARRATOR: One private organisation is run by two doctors from
America's southern states who believe they've found the answer for
Third World women in a drug called Quinacrine.
DR. STEPHEN MUMFORD: Quinacrine is the most important development in
contraception since the birth control pill. It has an enormous
potential for preventing births and we're talking about literally
billions of births.
DR. ELTON KESSEL: We have trials of the Quinacrine method going in
some 17 countries like India, China, Bangladesh, and the trials are
going very well. 100,000 women have had this method without a single
fatality being reported.
NARRATOR: Dr. Elton Kessel was the founding director of Family
Health International. He now researches Quinacrine in a worldwide
operation, masterminded from Dr. Mumford's basement in Chapel Hill,
North Carolina. Quinacrine is inserted into the top of the womb
where it causes inflammation and scarring in the Fallopian tube, in
theory blocking the tube with scar tissue and preventing the sperm
from reaching the egg.
STEPHEN MUMFORD: It's a very simple procedure, takes only a few
minutes. It can be done in very primitive settings by people who do
not necessarily have a lot of clinical skills. Quinacrine is clearly
the cheapest method available in the world and in fact the second
cheapest method would probably be more than 100 times as expensive
as the Quinacrine method. For $10,000's worth of Quinacrine pellets,
70,000 women can be sterilised.
INTERVIEWER: Is that a lot of women?
STEPHEN MUMFORD: That's a lot of women, and a lot of grateful women.
DR. AMY POLLACK: The story of Quinacrine is very unusual. It amazes
many people that, despite the fact that this drug has not been
approved by any major regulatory body for use in women, it's been
used and distributed to over, you know, 80,000, maybe 100,000 women
around the world who've been told that it's a safe and effective
method and therefore agreed to use the method. How's it been done?
Just a couple of guys out there running around with suitcases full
of the drug who distribute the drug to doctors, primarily, and
there's an appeal because it's inexpensive and it's easy to use.
NARRATOR: But some scientists believe the drug could put women's
lives at risk - from cancer and ectopic pregnancy. And they question
this entire approach to sterilisation.
PROF. SHREE MULAY: This method of producing scar tissue is extremely
barbaric. to try to damage the tissue so that you produce
inflammation and block the tubes that way I think is extremely
crude. It is imprecise for sure because one does not know where
exactly that is going to take place and it causes a tremendous
amount of pain because of the inflammation. There has been a long
history of chemical sterilisation research and this history is
really an ugly one and it's quite a shocking one because all kinds
of agents have been used - sulphuric acid, formaldehyde - all of
these agents which actually burn the tissue and cause production of
scar tissue. Chemical sterilisation was first tried out by the Nazis
in their very first experiments in the death camps. That it has been
picked up in the 60s, 70s and the 80s and been promoted as rescue
for the women of the Third World I think is quite extraordinary.
STEPHEN MUMFORD: We're seeing 500,000 women die per year. Every day
women die because of unwanted fertility that could be treated with
this method.
INTERVIEWER: And you're going to save them?
STEPHEN MUMFORD: That's... I'm not going to save them, they're going
to save themselves by electing this if the thing is made available,
if the method is made available. We know these women want this
method.
AMY POLLACK: What kills women in childbirth is horrible obstetrical
services totally inadequate services that exist around the world.
Not only are they bad services, but they're services provided for
women who want to have children, and those women are not going to
choose sterilisation. So women who don't choose sterilisation and
choose to get pregnant are not going to be saved by Quinacrine. The
numbers that are presented to us don't take that into account at
all.
NARRATOR: The World Health Organisation has stated that no further
Quinacrine research in women is justified until further laboratory
tests have been completed.
AMY POLLACK: We don't have answers to critical questions about the
long-term impact of Quinacrine on women, and until we have those
answers, and we can find those answers, we should not be using this
drug in women, period.
NARRATOR: So who is funding the research?
BETSY HARTMANN: A student of mine was examining who was funding the
anti-immigration movement in the United States and searching through
the tax records of various foundations, when she chanced upon the
tax records of the Leland Fikes Foundation and found to her
amazement that that Foundation was not only funding the Federation
for American Immigration Reform, which is very anti-immigrant, but
Mumford's work on Quinacrine. It's very scary that you have a
private foundation funding both an anti-immigration group and a form
of unethical contraception. I think there's a racial fear involved
in this politics.
STEPHEN MUMFORD: My God this is they call this an anti-immigrant
organisation. I think that the Federation of American Immigration
Reform is a highly patriotic institution, that is correct. I mean
very few Americans agree that we should have open borders and FAIR's
position is that we should not have open borders and that has been
the focus of their efforts since they were created. I'm very happy
to identify with the Federation for American Immigration Reform.
ELTON KESSEL: You know, if you open the borders of the United
States, the United States will become a developing country.
STEPHEN MUMFORD: That's correct. Most Americans do not want to live
in these conditions, including myself.
NARRATOR: They've had sympathisers for their philosophy in high
places.
STEPHEN MUMFORD: I've just completed a book and George Bush was just
leaving the directorship of the CIA at that time. George Bush read
the synopsis again, which said over-population is a graver threat to
US security than the nuclear threat. George Bush says I agree with
everything you're saying here in this synopsis and I can assure you
that the people at the CIA agree with you too, so at that point I
knew that at the highest levels of our government this issue was
being discussed.
NARRATOR: The latest scientific research promises the ultimate in
easy-to-use and safe contraception. Contraceptive vaccines are being
developed. In the future, one jab may prevent reproduction for
years. It offers great hope, but how could it be used, and by whom?
In the Philippines women believe they have been tested with a
contraceptive vaccine, secretly.
SISTER MARY PILAR VERZOSA: I first got suspicious of the vaccination
programme by the way it was being carried out. The government would
announce one or two days a year which they called national
immunisation days. They made announcements that only women of
reproductive age, that is from 14 to 45-year-old, should come to the
health centres for their tetanus immunisation shots.
NARRATOR: Records show two-thirds of tetanus deaths in the
Philippines are amongst men, so why would they target the women? She
was even more suspicious when she discovered the jabs were to be
given five times in three years, when usually a tetanus is given
much less frequently.
MARY PILAR VERZOSA: That really put a lot of questions in our minds.
The Department of Health would send their teams into the schools,
they would just tell the teacher in charge that this was a
government programme, it's a service being given, it's good for the
girls.
NARRATOR: Then she started to hear disturbing reports from women
when she was working in the slums.
MARY PILAR VERZOSA: The women would say why is it that the tetanus
shots that we've been getting have had effects on us? Our fertility
cycles are all fouled up, some of the women among us have had
bleedings and miscarriages, some have lost their babies at a very
early stage. The symptoms could come soon after their tetanus
vaccination - some the following day, others within a week's time.
For those who were pregnant on their first three or four months the
miscarriage was really frightening.
NARRATOR: There are several research programmes around the world
testing the contraceptive vaccine linked to tetanus which creates an
immune response. The vaccine contains Beta HCG, part of a hormone
necessary for pregnancy. This Beta HCG stimulates antibodies so that
if a woman's egg becomes fertilised her own natural HCG will be
destroyed and pregnancy will not occur.
MARY PILAR VERZOSA: I began to suspect that here in the Philippines
that's exactly what's happening. They have laced the tetanus toxoid
vials with the Beta HCG. The only way I could make sure that they
hadn't done that was to examine the vials, and how to get a hold of
those vials was going to be a problem. Who was I to collect them
from the health centres?
NARRATOR: Sister Mary was helped through the Catholic network. A
friend who worked in a health clinic removed the vials unnoticed.
The nuns packed them with ice and sent them to an independent
laboratory.
MARY PILAR VERZOSA: Oh boy that was really something when this came
out of my fax machine. Report on HCG concentration in vaccine vials.
Three out of those four vials registered positive for HCG, so my
suspicions are affirmed that here in our country they are not only
giving plain tetanus toxoid vaccination to our women, they are also
giving anti-fertility.
NARRATOR: Sister Mary was not alone. Many women and doctors reported
similar findings. Dr. Vilma Gonzaga became suspicious when she had
two miscarriages, both times after receiving the tetanus jab. She is
now suing the government since tests showed she had very high levels
of antibodies to Beta HCG.
DR VILMA GONZAGA [SUBTITLED]: Women should have been told that the
injection would cause miscarriage and, in the end, infertility. The
Department of Health should have asked beforehand, so that only
those who didn't want to have children had the injection. I really
hope and pray to God that I will still have a baby and get a normal
pregnancy. And I am still hoping that the Department of Health will
find an antidote to the antibodies in my body.
NARRATOR: But the government has denied any contamination of the
tetanus vials and their tests have led to different conclusions.
DR RAYMUNDO LO: We found insignificant traces of what the machine
read us HCG and I interpreted this as plain background noise, in
other words anything could have caused that signal which caused the
machine to read it thus HCG, so I think the notion of tetanus toxoid
being laced with HCG to cause abortions is plain hogwash.
NARRATOR: Medical practitioners in Manila do not accept this and
have called for further investigations.
DR REYNALDO ECHAVEZ: We in the Philippine Medical Association
doesn't believe in what the government is saying. The test that were
made in both big medical centres were all positive for HCG, Beta HCG,
and they claim that this is insignificant. To me this could not be
insignificant because it can produce anti-HCG. At the moment there
is a presence of HCG in the vaccine. It can produce anti-HCG and
this can now neutralise the HCG that a woman will produce during
pregnancy and abortion will set in.
NARRATOR: So are the fears genuine, or does this fit a Catholic
campaign to discredit the population programme? While the science
remains unresolved fewer women are accepting any vaccinations, and
this could damage public health. If the claims are true, how could
it have been done?
DR FAYS SCHRATER: If there is a conspiracy to immunise the women of
the Philippines with chorionic gonadotropin rather than tetanus,
then it requires the knowledge of some member of a government, or
two. It requires the participation of a manufacturer to link the
chorionic gonadotropin physically to the tetanus toxoid - you can't
just throw it in the vial and expect it to do its work. And it
requires that it be mislabelled and that it be shipped then to a
centre who knows what's in it and who is going to distribute it in a
guise of tetanus vaccine. Of course it's plausible and in fact it's
probably not all that complicated. All it takes is money and desire
and the willingness to lie. We have this long history, we, as women,
of been either lied to or coerced in terms of contraception. We've
been lied to in terms of either the dosage of hormones like in the
pill, we've been lied to about the effects of Norplant, we have had
Norplant coercively used and then refusal to remove it, women have
been forced into sterilisation camps. There's a long history of
medical science being used negatively on women's bodies and of women
being lied to.
FARIDA AKHTER: We are for family planning, but this is not
happening. External agencies - the government, the international aid
agencies - they decide what method we should have, how many children
we should have, and then they decide even what kind of contraceptive
we should have, and then they dump on us all the rejected ones, new
ones they test on our bodies and woman have no control over it.
NARRATOR: Every year 13 million children under five die, half a
million women die in pregnancy, there are 50 million abortions
worldwide. The need for family planning and new contraceptives is
overwhelming.
AMY POLLACK: If we fail to recognise the human rights of women in
developing countries in terms of testing contraceptives and using
contraceptives, then we will lose all of the methods around. Women
will deny themselves family planning methods because they will
consider it all of the time an experiment, and they will never trust
the support that they're getting from outside of their own country.
That's a risk that we take.
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