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ASA NEWSLETTER
 
 
February 2008
Volume 72
Number 2

Letters to the Editor



Some Curious History on Curare


read with interest your comment in the December 2007 “From the Crow’s Nest” regarding the use of curare.
A little history might be interesting.

In the 1950s, I was a resident at the Mass General Hospital, the home of Beecher and Todd. I don’t know how curare was used in other hospitals, but at MGH, it went as follows:

We were told that Beecher did not want us to use curare. We did, of course, along with diethylether, which meant that a relative “overdose” was given when compared with the doses used with cyclopropane or N2O. Secondly, we were told not to reverse curare because neostigmine was dangerous. Indeed it was because no atropine was used.

So much for curare “toxicity.”

Incidentally, Beecher also thought that thiopental was dangerous, and there were surgeons who forbade the use of either curare or thiopental for their patients.

We residents (and our patients) were lucky to have as our teachers some good Danes such as Bendixen, Pontoppidan and Andersen, who taught us to titrate curare and to reverse with atropine/neostigmine.

I enjoy reading the NEWSLETTER. Keep it coming.

Barbara E. Waud, M.D.
Shrewsbury, Massachusetts


Illuminating the Fog of History

read with great interest Dr. Bacon’s October 2007 editorial concerning anesthesiologist participation in capital punishment. However, I believe a few corrections and clarifications need to be made:

1. In 2006, the ASA Board of Directors and House of Delegates approved an explicit statement concerning physician participation in capital punishment. Specifically, that there is no association of capital punishment with the practice of medicine, particularly anesthesiology, that capital punishment in any form is not the practice of medicine, and that it does not require the participation of any physician. The full statement can be found on the ASA Web site: www.asahq.org/publicationsAndServices/standards/ 41.pdf.

2. The eugenics movement was widely embraced in the United States, particularly by the elites, during the first half of the 20th century. Its goal was to maintain or improve human genetic qualities. Eugenics was used to justify laws to forcibly sterilize “undesirables” and to prevent marriages and immigration. Eugenics was quickly swept under the rug after World War II after the discovery of the Nazi death camps.

Finally, the widespread practice of limiting enrollment of Jews in American medical schools had nothing to do with the eugenics movement. This was simple racism, justified by the claim that the policy just kept the proportion of Jewish students to that of the general population. Unfortunately, this is one of an almost endless list of racist policies built upon a foundation of “the ends justify the means.”

Dr. Bacon is to be commended for shining a light on these important issues. It is imperative that unsavory aspects of our history, as Americans and physicians, do not get lost in the fog of history.

J.P. Abenstein, M.S.E.E., M.D.
ASA Vice-Speaker of the House of Delegates


Reader Executes a History Lesson on Capital Punishment

was fascinated by reading your statement that the participation of anesthetists in capital punishment has come before the anesthesia community in the last 18 months (October 2007 “From the Crow’s Nest”). After the first execution using anesthetic agents in 1981 in Huntsville, Texas, M.T. “Pepper” Jenkins, M.D., the chair of my department at Parkland Hospital in Dallas, wrote an angry letter decrying the humorous responses of anesthetists to enquiry about such use of anesthetics.

In September 1984, A.H. (Buddy) Giesecke, M.D., proposed to the House of Delegates resolution No.16, concerning the Execution of Criminals, asking ASA to join the case Heckler vs. Chaney #83-1878 before the U.S. Supreme Court as amicus curiae to order the FDA to formally research the efficacy of anesthetic agents for the execution of criminals and also to encourage the FDA to research the fears of our patients who relate this use of anesthetics to their own anticipated anesthetic. Buddy made no mention of the possibility that some of these prisoners on death row were actually innocent.

I proposed with Edward A. Brunner, M.D., Ph.D., John J. “Jack” Downes, Jr., M.D., Ronald L. Katz, M.D., M. Jack Frumin, M.D., and Leonard Bachman, M.D., that the Association of University Anesthesiologists (AUA) at the Seattle meeting in 1991 condemn this use of anesthetics. Stanley Deutsch, M.D., Ph.D., formerly the chair at the University of Oklahoma, who had advised that state about doses and the order of drugs in 1977, was at that meeting. AUA, after a motion by Craig Alexander, tabled our motion.

Dear Douglas Bacon, I have great respect for your writing, but you left some history out of your article “Descent Into Darkness?” in the October 2007 ASA NEWSLETTER. This subject has received our attention long before 18 months ago. My opinion? We should condemn such use of anesthetics categorically and then condemn executing prisoners by any method.

Lawrence D. Egbert, M.D., M.P.H.
Baltimore, Maryland


Our Stance on Death Penalty Could Be Impetus for Change

t a time when the death penalty system is clearly in decline, it seems strange that members of ASA should show such interest in physician presence at executions.1 It is particularly worrisome because the Kentucky case, Baze v. Rees, is currently before the Supreme Court and has resulted in a defacto moratorium on executions. By stepping forward to offer a “humane” means of execution, anesthesiologists would provide the Supreme Court a mechanism whereby execution could be re-instated under a veneer of medically guided respectability. At this legal moment, would anesthesiologists’ offers to participate in executions be regarded not as a “humane” gesture but instead a pro-execution stance?

What if circumstances were different, and instead of the United States, such policies were proposed by anesthesiologists in other countries? How would we regard the ethics of Russian anesthesiologists if they were to offer terminal anesthesia for those condemned by Mr. Putin’s courts? Likewise, what would be our stance concerning anesthesiologists in China, Egypt or Iran if they were to provide execution by anesthesia? Would we consider this type of anesthesiologist participation in this state-directed punishment worthy of “debate,” or simply wrong?

Now we have a remarkable opportunity to enter the death penalty debate with a humanity of a more honest kind. The Supreme Court must be told that anesthesiologists will never step forward and offer their services as executioners’ assistants. Our vehement rejection of such participation could be a step toward an end to the death penalty.

John C. Sill, M.D.
Rochester, Minnesota

References:
1. Bacon DR. Descent into darkness? ASA Newsl. 2007; 71(10):1-2,11.


The views and opinions expressed in the “Letters to the Editor” are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of ASA or the NEWSLETTER Editorial Board. Letters submitted for consideration should not exceed 300 words in length. The Editor has the authority to accept or reject any letter submitted for publication. Personal correspondence to the Editor by letter or e-mail must be clearly indicated as “Not for Publication” by the sender. Letters must be signed (although name may be withheld on request) and are subject to editing and abridgment.


 

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