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ARTICLE |

"SELF-SACRIFICE IN THE WARFARE AGAINST DISEASE"

W. C. Braisted, M.D.
JAMA. 1919;73(17):1303. doi:10.1001/jama.1919.02610430051028.
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ABSTRACT

To the Editor:  —I have read with interest, pleasure and pride the editorial in your issue of Oct. 11, 1919, entitled "Self-Sacrifice in the Warfare Against Disease." It is impossible to honor too highly the nobility of the men who voluntarily, calmly, cheerfully jeopardize their lives in the conduct of an experiment undertaken to elucidate the obscurities of diagnosis and treatment: who do this with none of the inspiring features of battle and no prospect of being welcomed home as heroes if they survive, yet have had fully explained to them the risk they incur.These men are heroes in the fullest and most beautiful meaning of the word, and we should know about them and publish to the world the story of their deeds. When such experiments are conducted on enlisted men ignorant of the exact nature of what is being done, and perhaps not appreciating the safeguards that

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