This op-ed is from the New England Journal of
Medicine, certainly one of -if not 'the'- top US
medical journals:

http://content.nejm.org/cgi/content/full/351/5/415
There is increasing evidence that U.S. doctors,
nurses, and medics have been complicit in torture and
other illegal procedures in Iraq, Afghanistan, and
Guantanamo Bay. Such medical complicity suggests still
another disturbing dimension of this broadening
scandal. 

We know that medical personnel have failed to report
to higher authorities wounds that were clearly caused
by torture and that they have neglected to take steps
to interrupt this torture. In addition, they have
turned over prisoners' medical records to
interrogators who could use them to exploit the
prisoners' weaknesses or vulnerabilities. We have not
yet learned the extent of medical involvement in
delaying and possibly falsifying the death
certificates of prisoners who have been killed by
torturers. 

A May 22 article on Abu Ghraib in the New York Times
states that "much of the evidence of abuse at the
prison came from medical documents" and that records
and statements "showed doctors and medics reporting to
the area of the prison where the abuse occurred
several times to stitch wounds, tend to collapsed
prisoners or see patients with bruised or reddened
genitals."1 According to the article, two doctors who
gave a painkiller to a prisoner for a dislocated
shoulder and sent him to an outside hospital
recognized that the injury was caused by his arms
being handcuffed and held over his head for "a long
period," but they did not report any suspicions of
abuse. A staff sergeant�medic who had seen the
prisoner in that position later told investigators
that he had instructed a military policeman to free
the man but that he did not do so. A nurse, when
called to attend to a prisoner who was having a panic
attack, saw naked Iraqis in a human pyramid with
sandbags over their heads but did not report it until
an investigation was held several months later...

...American doctors at Abu Ghraib and elsewhere have
undoubtedly been aware of their medical responsibility
to document injuries and raise questions about their
possible source in abuse. But those doctors and other
medical personnel were part of a command structure
that permitted, encouraged, and sometimes orchestrated
torture to a degree that it became the norm � with
which they were expected to comply � in the immediate
prison environment. 

The doctors thus brought a medical component to what I
call an "atrocity-producing situation" � one so
structured, psychologically and militarily, that
ordinary people can readily engage in atrocities. Even
without directly participating in the abuse, doctors
may have become socialized to an environment of
torture and by virtue of their medical authority
helped sustain it. In studying various forms of
medical abuse, I have found that the participation of
doctors can confer an aura of legitimacy and can even
create an illusion of therapy and healing...

...Physicians are no more or less moral than other
people. But as heirs to shamans and witch doctors, we
may be seen by others � and sometimes by ourselves �
as possessing special magic in connection with life
and death. Various regimes have sought to harness that
magic to their own despotic ends. Physicians have
served as actual torturers in Chile and elsewhere;
have surgically removed ears as punishment for
desertion in Saddam Hussein's Iraq; have incarcerated
political dissenters in mental hospitals, notably in
the Soviet Union; have, as whites in South Africa,
falsified medical reports on blacks who were tortured
or killed; and have, as Americans associated with the
Central Intelligence Agency, conducted harmful,
sometimes fatal, experiments involving drugs and mind
control. 

With the possible exception of the altering of death
certificates, the recent transgressions of U.S.
military doctors have apparently not been of this
order. But these examples help us to recognize what
doctors are capable of when placed in
atrocity-producing situations. A recent statement by
the Physicians for Human Rights addresses this
vulnerability in declaring that "torture can also
compromise the integrity of health professionals..."
 
 
Horrible.  I have already posted my opinion of
financial incentives to physicians WRT "gatekeeping;"
this is far, far worse.  Doing triage is dreadful, but
necessary, in disaster situations when resources are
limited;  however this is just dreadful.

Debbi


                
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