Hungry aboriginal kids, adults in Canada were subject of nutritional 
experiments: paper

Plans were developed in 1947 for research on about 1,000 hungry aboriginal 
children in six residential schools,including one in Port Alberni, B.C.

BY BOB WEBER, THE CANADIAN PRESS, AND MIKE HAGER, VANCOUVER SUN
JULY 16, 2013 7:36 PM
http://www.vancouversun.com/health/Hungry+aboriginal+kids+adults+were+subject+nutritional/8667877/story.html
[cid:image001.png@01CE826D.60CE9300]


[cid:image002.jpg@01CE826D.60CE9300]

A nurse takes a blood sample from a boy at the Indian School, Port Alberni, 
B.C., in 1948, during the time when nutritional experiments were being 
conducted on students there and five other residential schools. THE CANADIAN 
PRESS/ho-Library and Archives Canada
Recently published historical research says hungry aboriginal children and 
adults were once used as unwitting subjects in nutritional experiments by 
Canadian government bureaucrats, including at a residential school in Port 
Alberni on Vancouver Island.
"This was the hardest thing I've ever written," said Ian Mosby, who has 
revealed new details about one of the least-known but perhaps most disturbing 
aspects of government policy toward aboriginals immediately after the Second 
World War.
Mosby - whose work at the University of Guelph focuses on the history of food 
in Canada - was researching the development of health policy when he ran across 
something strange.
Government documents eventually revealed a decade-long, government-run 
experiment starting in 1942 that came to span the entire country and involved 
at least 1,300 aboriginals, most of them children.
At the Port Alberni residential school, milk rations were deliberately held for 
two years to less than half the recommended amount to get a "baseline" reading 
for when the allowance was tripled, according to a 1953 report unearthed by 
Mosby.
Bella Coola's Lorraine Tallio, 64, spent about three years at the Port Alberni 
school starting in 1954 and painfully remembers about half of the students 
drinking milk with each meal and the others being denied it.
"They had staff members in the dining room," she said. "They would make sure 
that the ones (who) got the milk drank the milk without sharing."
Mosby couldn't confirm or deny that system of enforced consumption, as he 
didn't find evidence of experiments there after 1952. But he said in an email 
that "most residential school survivors have powerful memories of hunger and 
food related punishments being a key element of their experiences."
The tests first began with a 1942 visit by government researchers to a number 
of remote aboriginal reserve communities in northern Manitoba, including places 
such as The Pas and Norway House.
They found people who were hungry, beggared by a combination of the collapsing 
fur trade and declining government support. The population was demoralized and 
marked by, in the words of the researchers, "shiftlessness, indolence, 
improvidence and inertia."
The researchers suggested those problems - "so long regarded as inherent or 
hereditary traits in the Indian race" - were in fact the results of 
malnutrition. Instead of recommending an increase in support, the researchers 
decided that isolated, dependent, hungry people would be ideal subjects for 
tests on the effects of different diets.
"This is a period of scientific uncertainty around nutrition," said Mosby. 
"Vitamins and minerals had really only been discovered during the interwar 
period.
"In the 1940s, there were a lot of questions about what are human requirements 
for vitamins. Malnourished aboriginal people became viewed as possible means of 
testing these theories."
The first experiment began on 300 Norway House Cree. Of that group, 125 were 
selected to receive vitamin supplements, which were withheld from the rest. At 
the time, researchers calculated the local people were living on less than 
1,500 calories a day. Normal, healthy adults generally require at least 2,000.
"The research team was well aware that these vitamin supplements only addressed 
a small part of the problem," Mosby writes. "The experiment seems to have been 
driven, at least in part, by the nutrition experts' desire to test their 
theories on a ready-made 'laboratory' populated with already malnourished human 
experimental subjects."
The research spread. In 1947, plans were developed for research on about 1,000 
hungry aboriginal children in six residential schools in Port Alberni, Kenora, 
Ont., Schubenacadie, N.S., and Lethbridge, Alta.
At one school, children were divided into one group that received vitamin, iron 
and iodine supplements and one that didn't. Another school depressed levels of 
vitamin B1 to create another baseline before levels were boosted. A special 
enriched flour that couldn't legally be sold elsewhere in Canada under food 
adulteration laws was fed to children at another school.
And, so that all the results could be properly measured, one school was allowed 
none of those supplements.
Many dental services were withdrawn from participating schools during that 
time. Gum health was an important measuring tool for scientists and they didn't 
want treatments on children's teeth distorting results.
The experiments, repugnant today, would probably have been considered ethically 
dubious even at the time, said Mosby.
"I think they really did think they were helping people. Whether they thought 
they were helping the people that were actually involved in the studies, that's 
a different question."
He noted that rules for research on humans were just being formulated and 
adopted by the scientific community.
Little has been written about the nutritional experiments. A May 2000 article 
in the Anglican Journal about some of them was the only reference Mosby could 
find.
Not much was learned from those hungry little bodies. A few papers were 
published - "they were not very helpful," Mosby said - and he couldn't find 
evidence that the Norway House research program was completed.
"They knew from the beginning that the real problem and the cause of 
malnutrition was underfunding. That was established before the studies even 
started and when the studies were completed that was still the problem."
For Tallio, the new research is further proof of "how cruel" the residential 
schools were "for our native people."
"People should speak up and say this is what happened to us. Some (native) 
people don't even want to talk about it because it upsets them."
mha...@postmedia.com<mailto:mha...@postmedia.com>
Twitter.com/MikePHager<http://twitter.com/MikePHager>



[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



------------------------------------

Native News North
List info{all lists}:
http://nativenewsonline.org/natnews.htm

Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/NatNews-north/

<*> Your email settings:
    Individual Email | Traditional

<*> To change settings online go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/NatNews-north/join
    (Yahoo! ID required)

<*> To change settings via email:
    natnews-north-dig...@yahoogroups.com 
    natnews-north-fullfeatu...@yahoogroups.com

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
    natnews-north-unsubscr...@yahoogroups.com

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
    http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/

Reply via email to