7. Norpland and Human Lab Experiments in Third World
Lead to Forced
Use in the United States
Sources:
MS., Title: "The Misuses of Norplant: Who Gets Stuck?," Date: November/December
1996, Author: Jennifer Washburn; WASHINGTON FREE PRESS, Title: "Norplant
and the Dark Side of the Law," Date: March/April 1997, Author: Rebecca Kavoussi;
HUMAN EVENTS, Title: "BBC Documentary Claims That U.S. Foreign Aid Funded
Norplant Testing On Uninformed Third World Women," Date: May 16, 1997, Author:
Joseph D'Agostino
SSU Censored Researchers: Carolyn Williams and Katie Sims
SSU Faculty Evaluator: Jeanette Koshar, Ph.D.
Low-income women in the United States and in the Third World have been
the unwitting targets of a U.S. policy to control birth rates. Despite
continuous reports of debilitating effects of the drug Norplant, women
here and in the Third World, who have received the implantable contraceptive,
have had difficulty making their complaints heard, and in some instances
have been deceived, according to our resources. Norplant is a set of
six plastic cylinders containing a synthetic version of a female hormone.
It is intended to prevent pregnancy for five years. Surgery is required
for removal -- at a cost far beyond the reach of low-income women, regardless
of their nationality, if the removal is not subsidized.
Jennifer Washburn's Ms. article focuses on Medicaid rejection
of Norplant removals for low-income women prior to the standard five-year
period, even when side effects are chronic. In the U.S. State Medicaid
agencies, for example, often generously cover the cost of Norplant insertion
but don't cover removal before the full five years. Although Medicaid
policy may cover early removal "when determined 'medically necessary,"'
medical necessity is determined by the provider and the Medicaid agency,
not the patient.
Journalist Rebecca Kavoussi reports in her Washington Free Press
article that the reproductive rights of women addicted to drugs or alcohol
have once again become the focus of U.S. legislation. Senate Bill 5278,
now under consideration in the state of Washington, would require "involuntary
use of long-term pharmaceutical birth control" (Norplant) for women
who give birth to drug-addicted babies. Under this proposal, a woman
who gives birth to a drug-addicted baby would get two chances -- the
first voluntary, the second mandatory -- to undergo drug treatment and
counseling. Upon the birth of a third drug-addicted child, the state
would force the mother to undergo surgery to insert the Norplant contraceptive.
Similarly, Norplant is figuring in reproductive rights issues and legislative
policies worldwide as well. In his May 1997 Human Events article,
Joseph D'Agostino reports on the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC)
documentary The Human Laboratory, which accused the U.S. Agency
for International Development (U.S.AID) of acting in conjunction with
the Population Council of New York City, to use uninformed women in
Bangladesh, Haiti, and the Philippines for Norplant tests. Many of these
women were subjects in pre-injection drug trials that began in 1985
in Bangladesh, one of the world's poorest countries.
The BBC documentary contained interviews with women who
complained of debilitating side effects from Norplant, but who were rebuffed when
they asked to have the implants removed. These women stated that they had been
told that the drug was safe and not experimental. Implantation was free.
One woman interviewed in the documentary said that after implantation,
suddenly her body became weak, and that she couldn't get up, look after
her children, or cook. Other women reported similar problems, stating
that when they asked to have Norplant removed, they were told it would
ruin the study. "I went to the clinic as often as twice a week,"
one woman said, "but they said, 'This thing we put in your arm
costs 5,000 takas. We'll not remove it unless you pay this money."'
The narrator of the documentary, Farida Akhter, recounted that when
another woman begged to have the implant removed -- saying, "I'm
dying, please help me get it out" -- she was told, "Okay,
when you die, inform us, we'll get it out of your body."
The documentary asserts that the women should have been told that the
pre-introductory trials were to assess the drug's safety, efficiency,
and acceptability. Now, says the BBC, many women who were used in the
trials are suffering from eyesight disorders, strokes, persistent bleeding,
and other side effects. However, the Norplant saga appears to have global
political implications that interfere with reasonable resolution. According
to the documentary, the U.S. govern-ment considers global population
control a "national security issue" and has increased U.S.
population control efforts around the world.
Norplant
side effects have resulted in over 400 lawsuits being filed against Wyeth-Ayerst,
the maker of Norplant. These lawsuits include class actions representing over
50,000 women which are only just now making their way to the courts.
UPDATE BV AUTHOR JENNIFER WASH-BURN: "When Norplant hit
the market in 1990, a flurry of state legislation was proposed offering
AFDC recipients monetary incentives (anywhere from $200 to $700) to
use Norplant. At the same time, state Medicaid agencies were crafting
policies that deny coverage for early Norplant removal (before five
years) even if a woman was experiencing chronic side effects, policies
that still exist in many states. The mainstream media, to my knowledge,
never picked up on this story, and rarely, if ever, covers issues affecting
the health and reproductive rights of low-income women. Norplant usage
has, however, declined dramatically in all populations largely due to
the negative publicity generated from the lawsuits involving some 50,000
women which are only just now making their way to the courts.
"Since my story came out, 'child exclusion laws' that deny additional
benefits to children born to mothers on welfare have spread to at least
21 states. The new federal welfare 'reform' law permits states to punitively
exclude benefits to these children, despite the fact that two recent
studies in New Jersey and Arkansas -- the first two states to implement
'family caps' as they are euphemistically called -- found no difference
in birth rates between women denied benefits and those eligible for
them. At the same time that welfare recipients are being asked to achieve
self-sufficiency in five years or less, 34 states continue to allow
Medicaid coverage of abortion services only in cases of rape, incest,
or life en- dangerment. Meanwhile, the new law encourages competition
among states for `illegitimacy bonuses,' and dedicates an extraordinary
$50 million for 'abstinence-only' education -- which may not be combined
with traditional sex education programs that teach about both abstinence
and contraception. Many fear that this will wipe out more encompassing
sex education programs from schools, hardly a viable solution for sexually
active women of any class who want control over their reproduction as
well as their lives."
UPDATE BY AUTHOR REBECCA KAVOUSSI: "Although Washington
state Senate Bill 5278 will take effect July 1, 1998 (if passed), there
has been no mainstream media coverage of its year-long journey through
the Washington state legislature. "Technology is commonly equated
with progress, and progress is believed to be positive. Accordingly,
our culture seems to view advances in reproductive technology as indicators
of more broad and extensive advances in freedom and autonomy for women
as a group. In the case of legislation like this, however, we glimpse
the stunning negative potential of technology when it is called upon
to bring order to emotionally and politically loaded situations.
"In the most updated version of the bill, women
targeted for mandatory contraception also face the termination of parental rights.
While the writers of the bill suggest no funding for improving the resources available
to pregnant addicts, they are considering extending Senate Bill 5278 to include
mothers of children born with fetal alcohol syndrome.
"Both Lexis-Nexis and the Web offer the full text of legislation
at state and national levels. In her book, At Women's Expense: State
Power and the Politics of Fetal Rights (Harvard University Press,
1993), Cynthia Daniels details the relationship between reproductive
technology and the state."
UPDATE BY AUTHOR JOSEPH D'AGOSTINO: "Two crucial concerns
intersect in the story of Western organizations promoting population
control in the Third World at all costs: the unspoken belief that the
lives of Third World people are less valuable than those of Westerners,
and the perversion of women's sacred reproductive rights. Despite the
well-respected BBC's report, almost nothing has appeared in the American
mainstream media on the experimental use of Norplant on unsuspecting
Third World women. All that I could find was a two sentence mention
in passing by a guest on NPR's Talk of the Nation on February 5, 1997,
and an article by Mount Holyoke College Professor of Women's Studies
Asoka Bandarage in the July 14, 1997 Christian Science Monitor.
"The
Population Council continues to insist Norplant is safe, as does the World Health
Organization and U.S. AID. But the FDA has kept open the petition of the Population
Research Institute (PRI) to decertify the device. Class action suits against the
device are pending."