The IRE Resource Center is a major research library containing more than 23,250 investigative stories — both print and broadcast. These stories are searchable online or by contacting the Resource Center directly (573-882-3364 or rescntr@ire.org) where a researcher can help you pinpoint what you need. Browse or search the tipsheet section of our library below. Stories are not available for download but can be easily ordered by contacting the Resource Center:
Search results for "pathology" ...
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G.I. Jerk
This investigation explores the way one man, Phil Haberman, scammed the U.S. Army. Though in reality he was only an assistant cook, he forged paperwork and lied pathologically to convince many people that he was a sniper with the Army Special Forces. This investigation de-constructs his lies and talks to the people he took advantage of.
Tags: war; military; army; soldiers; fraud; federal government; Iraq
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Mad Cow Autopsies
KY3 reports on the reluctance of Missouri hospitals to perform an autopsy of the corpse of Delmer Middleton, a resident of Lawrence county, MO, who died of Creuzfeldt-Jakob Disease (CJD). Although Middletown family suspected this was a case of mad cow disease in its human version, known as the new variant of CJD, doctors refused to examine the body because it would have been too dangerous for themselves. As mutated proteins typical for the mad cow disease cannot be destroyed by conventional sterilization, an autopsy would mean destroying some hospital equipment as well. The investigative team points out that the findings "raise serious questions about the effectiveness of mad cow disease surveillance in America."
Tags: TAPE; TRANSCRIPT; public health; hospital; doctors; pathology; mad cow; England
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Ethics & Orphans: the Monster Study
In 1939, speech pathologist Wendell Johnson and a graduate student conducted an experiment on a group of orphans near the University of Iowa. Their theory: "Stuttering begins in the ear of the listener, not in the mouth of the child." To test the hypothesis, the researchers conducted a psychological experiment on children starved for attention. Those who stuttered improved with positive speech therapy, but the children who had no trouble speaking were given negative therapy and became chronic stutterers for life. The research was never published and was known at the University as "The Monster Study" for the harm it did to the parentless children.
Tags: stutter; ethics; morality; science; institutional review; orphans; unethical study; human experiments; pathology; Iowa State Board of Control; children; control groups
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Could Breast Implants Make You Sick?
This story investigates saline breast implants. In a small percentage of cases, some of the "fluid-filled sacs" have become contaminated with mold and bacteria causing dangerous health problems to the wearer.
Tags: breast implants; saline; mold; bacteria; pathology; FDA; plastic surgery; women's health; medical records
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Children of a Lesser God
"It was a modern day horror story: a little girl hidden away in rat-infested squalor for most of her life. When the authorities' took her away from her mother and grandmother, the nine-year-old had never been to school or played outside and could only make squeaking noises. Now dedicated social wokers, academics, and foster parents are trying to undo years of unimaginable neglect.
Tags: child abuse; foster care; social work; neglect; Child Protective Services (CPS); Austin's Children's Center; Kristene Blackstone; Rosedale; mainstreaming; mute; speech pathology
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No title (id: 111)
The Columbian (Vancouver, Wash.) shows Clark County hospital is involved in Medicare/Medicaid fraud of pathology and lab work charges, August 1977.
Tags: None