Lawyer: 6 Austrians were injected with malaria

By George Jahn

Associated Press

Published: Thursday, Feb. 9 2012 2:09 p.m. MST

VIENNA — The number of people claiming they were injected with the parasite causing malaria at a Vienna psychiatric ward while teenagers grew to seven Thursday, with the lawyer representing six of them saying their accounts, given separately, are credible because they are similar.

Most — but not all — of the alleged victims were wards of Vienna foster homes in the 1960s. Lawyer Johannes Oehlboeck said one of his clients told him that her parents took her to the clinic "because she was rebellious," while the daily Kurier quoted another as saying that he was dropped off by his parents after he insisted on becoming an actor.

The allegations — and the growing number of people making them — casts renewed focus on past practices at publicly funded Viennese institutions less than half a year after municipal authorities set up an independent commission to investigate allegations of systematic rape of young girls more than five decades ago at a foster home run by the city. That probe is still ongoing.

Oehlboeck said eight people who say they were juvenile psychiatric patients at Vienna's University Clinic in the 1960s spoke of painful or debilitating methods, including six who described the "malaria treatments."

He said all six told him that they quickly developed a high fever which was treated on alternate days with a quinine dosed sufficiently to reduce the symptoms. He said the treatment was ended after 14 days with an injection of what he said was likely a high dose of quinine, but not before the child's "blood was drawn and injected into the buttocks of another child."

Oehlboeck quoted one of the alleged victims as saying "the doctor said 'we are carrying out tests.'"

He did not name his clients. But Kurier carried a large photo of another alleged patient and identified him as Peter Schleicher. He was quoted as saying that his parents brought him to the clinic for treatment on the advice of one of his teachers after he insisted on becoming an actor.

Several victims complained of recurring bouts of high fever and shakes for years after the treatment, Oehlboeck said.

Such injections were an accepted method in the early 20th century to treat syphilis, with the resulting high fever killing the bacteria that caused the disease, while the malaria was kept under control by doses of quinine. Austrian physician Julius Wagner-Jauregg received the 1927 Nobel prize for medicine for developing this treatment.

Get The Deseret News Everywhere

Subscribe

Mobile

RSS