The Normals
A People's History of Modern America in Five Human Experiments
Laura Stark(Author)
University of Chicago Press
Will be published approx. on 15. January 2027
Book
Paperback/Softback
336 pages
978-0-226-85524-0 (ISBN)
Description
How healthy control subjects in clinical research transformed the practice and labor of science, as told by the Normals themselves.
In the 1950s, the National Institutes of Health were in search of a large, replenishing stream of healthy people to participate in clinical studies. To establish legal sources of test subjects, the NIH signed unprecedented contracts with American colleges, church organizations, and other government agencies, and in the process gave rise to a new type of test subject: the "normal patient." Thousands of them eventually moved into the NIH Clinical Center to live in hospital rooms, eat food prepared in a metabolic kitchen, and follow-or flout-the rules.
The Normals is a groundbreaking account of the NIH Normal Volunteer Patient Program, which has lasted into the twenty-first century. This program harnessed outside organizations in all areas of postwar American life-colleges and universities, labor unions, civic groups, federal prisons, and churches-to recruit research subjects for human experiments. Drawing on thousands of pages of unearthed government documents, oral histories, and personal materials shared by the patients themselves (collected in a new archive), Laura Stark follows five experiments and the people involved, delving into their biographies, their time at the Clinical Center, and the thorny problem of determining who counts as "normal." The "Normals" were not passive objects of study, Stark shows, but active research participants who collaborated with scientists, maintained the laboratories where they served, informed official ethics policies, and bargained to meet their needs.
By taking seriously the pillow fights and the first kisses, the bible clubs and the movie nights that animated the Clinical Center as much as the medical experiments, The Normals brings to life a surprising true story of the origins of our present-day system of human experiment, one that at once explores what it means to work, to serve, to volunteer.
In the 1950s, the National Institutes of Health were in search of a large, replenishing stream of healthy people to participate in clinical studies. To establish legal sources of test subjects, the NIH signed unprecedented contracts with American colleges, church organizations, and other government agencies, and in the process gave rise to a new type of test subject: the "normal patient." Thousands of them eventually moved into the NIH Clinical Center to live in hospital rooms, eat food prepared in a metabolic kitchen, and follow-or flout-the rules.
The Normals is a groundbreaking account of the NIH Normal Volunteer Patient Program, which has lasted into the twenty-first century. This program harnessed outside organizations in all areas of postwar American life-colleges and universities, labor unions, civic groups, federal prisons, and churches-to recruit research subjects for human experiments. Drawing on thousands of pages of unearthed government documents, oral histories, and personal materials shared by the patients themselves (collected in a new archive), Laura Stark follows five experiments and the people involved, delving into their biographies, their time at the Clinical Center, and the thorny problem of determining who counts as "normal." The "Normals" were not passive objects of study, Stark shows, but active research participants who collaborated with scientists, maintained the laboratories where they served, informed official ethics policies, and bargained to meet their needs.
By taking seriously the pillow fights and the first kisses, the bible clubs and the movie nights that animated the Clinical Center as much as the medical experiments, The Normals brings to life a surprising true story of the origins of our present-day system of human experiment, one that at once explores what it means to work, to serve, to volunteer.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Chicago
United States
Publishing group
The University of Chicago Press
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Illustrations
27 halftones
Dimensions
Height: 229 mm
Width: 152 mm
Weight
454 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-226-85524-0 (9780226855240)
Copyright in bibliographic data is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or its licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Person
Laura Stark is associate professor at the Department for Medicine, Health, and Society at Vanderbilt University. She is the author of Behind Closed Doors: IRBs and the Making of Ethical Research, published by the University of Chicago Press.
Content
Archives Consulted
Introduction: The Normals
1. Churches: Dale Goes to War
2. Churches Redux: Betty Bears Witness
3. Colleges: Jim Studies Life
4. Unions and Clubs: Five Pays the Dues
5. Locals: Bernadette Works to Death
Conclusion: Labors of Love
Acknowledgments
Notes
Index
Introduction: The Normals
1. Churches: Dale Goes to War
2. Churches Redux: Betty Bears Witness
3. Colleges: Jim Studies Life
4. Unions and Clubs: Five Pays the Dues
5. Locals: Bernadette Works to Death
Conclusion: Labors of Love
Acknowledgments
Notes
Index