Baby Bones Used in Nuclear Tests in BritainBones were removed from the bodies of thousands of dead babies without parents' consent, a government agency admitted on Sunday.The UK Atomic Energy Authority (UKAEA) said thigh bones from 3, 400 children were tested between 1954 and 1970, the BBC reported. It emerged in June that the Yorkhill Children's Hospital in Glasgow had been involved in the project - but it has now been revealed that bones were collected from hospitals throughout Britain. Scientists were trying to establish what effect the fallout from nuclear tests being carried out around the world was having on health. Doctors feared that because it was contaminating milk, it could be building up to dangerous levels in children's bones. A UKAEA spokesman said: "We used child bone samples supplied by hospitals following post-mortem. Regrettably it is clear that parental consent for the samples was not sought at the time." "I do not know the dates of the rules and regulations - but I am pretty sure in the 1950s doctors would have just said the research was all for the best and the samples could just be taken, " he added. After being incinerated, the bones were analyzed for the radioactive isotope strontium-90 - a dangerous chemical that works in the same way as calcium. The spokesman said the research, carried out in Glasgow and Woolwich, south-east London, led to the end of nuclear weapons testing as it emerged how dangerous the fall out could be. A spokeswoman for Scottish Parents for a Public Inquiry into Organ Retention said the revelation was "devastating". "This is only the tip of the iceberg," she said. "There are so many projects like this and we have no idea how many. Parents up until now have had no say in anything that has been done to their children after death." She added: "We need a law that says if you touch our children without our knowledge or consent you will go to jail." Lancaster MP Hilton Dawson is calling for a full inquiry into reports that the Royal Lancaster Infirmary was involved in the research project between 1955 and 1971. |
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