Bad Drugs: Lethal Injection Does Not Work as Designed

A new study shows that failure to inject proper dosages potentially leads to slow, painful deaths from chemical asphyxiation















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LETHAL MISTAKE: Current lethal injection protocols would not pass muster in animal euthanasia and may leave condemned inmates needlessly suffering. Image: COURTESY OF CALIFORNIA DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS AND REHABILITATION

Lethal injection was invented in 1977 by Oklahoma state medical examiner Jay Chapman, who, based on his own experiences under anesthesia, concocted the drug cocktail from an ultrashort-acting barbiturate and a chemical paralytic. He added a heart-stopping drug to the mix to provide a painless, quick death with built-in redundancy. If one drug didn't kill the death row inmate, one of the other two would. But dosage is critical to the efficacy of lethal injection according to a new study, which found that if any of the doses are off the recipient not only feels pain, but he or she also must suffer a slow death by the asphyxiation following total paralysis.

Molecular biologist Teresa Zimmers of the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine and colleagues, including a surgeon, an anesthesiologist and a lawyer, analyzed the sparse public records of executions. Only two states provide such records: North Carolina and California, the latter of which was forced to do so by court order. In each of these states, varying dosages of sodium thiopental (a barbiturate to induce anesthesia), pancuronium bromide (a muscle relaxant that paralyzes all the muscles of the body) and potassium chloride (a salt that speeds the heart until it stops) are injected in doses designed to kill condemned inmates. Though the dosages vary by state, they do not vary by inmate—each is given the same amount of the drug whether short or tall, fat or thin.

As a result, death by lethal injection is not necessarily quick or painless, according to the study published in PLoS Medicine. In North Carolina inmates took an average of nine minutes to die (and much longer before flawed drug protocols were changed), and in California cessation of the heartbeat took from two to eight minutes after the last injection of the heart-stopping potassium chloride. "When potassium chloride was added, it didn't seem to change the time of death," Zimmers notes. "This suggests that potassium chloride may not be the agent of death."

In addition, researchers found that the amounts of thiopental used may not be sufficient to render the procedure painless, based on comparisons with veterinary data. In the veterinary realm, government and professional oversight has led to the development of strict dosage guidelines for the appropriate painless killing of animals. The dosages used in human executions are, in some cases, lower by body weight than the dosages that would kill only 50 percent of mice and from which monkeys have been able to successfully recover. "The way that thiopental is administered, it would be an unacceptably low dose if the inmate was a pig scheduled for euthanasia," Zimmers says.

And, although the dosages of potassium chloride would be considered adequate to kill animals, they do not appear to have the intended effect in humans, failing to hasten the time of death. "We are doing it successfully in animals and we're doing it successfully because they've taken a hard look at it," notes Jon Sheldon, a study co-author and criminal defense attorney in Virginia. "When you do it with animals, there is no pain. It's likely there is with people."

That pain takes the form of slow asphyxiation due to an inability to use the diaphragm muscle to breathe as a result of the pancuronium bromide. "In such case death by suffocation would occur in a paralyzed inmate fully aware of the progressive suffocation and potassium-induced sensation of burning," the researchers write.

The scientists analyzed only 41 of the 891 lethal injections that have taken place in the U.S. to date (and considerably more worldwide). But many of the remaining states' drug protocols and details of their executions remain secret. Nevertheless, researchers say the small sample indicates that the cocktail is not working as intended. "This idea that this is a painless procedure is completely wrong," Zimmers says. "It's just invisible because the person is paralyzed."



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  1. 1. Dr. Barb 06:45 AM 1/30/08

    As suspected, this is cruel and unusual punishment; When are we going to stop acting like a country that is stuck in the Dark Ages?America kills many who are mentally ill, and clearly some who are not guilty, but that is not the issue here; I am ashamed to be an American, and have regrets that I have not been able to stop these barbraric practices. The entire prison system is a scandalous, but hidden part of a nation that calls itself so advanced..I see it as up to scientists to lobby as hard for ethics as they do for selling drugs, and I wish that other nations would impose sanctions on the U.S. until we do something to reform the so-called justice system. This country is a mess, and I see the prisons as magnifying glasses of the problems we need to pay the most attention to, and yet not one of the candidates mentions this as an issue. Thanks for stating what I knew already about lethal injection's horror.

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  2. 2. jacolynfs 02:58 PM 12/10/09

    i agree with everything Dr. Barb said.. but if we think we have to use lethal injection and it hurts the person, it would make more sense to just inject air. at least they would feel NOTHING and die within seconds.. im against the death penalty but the air idea is much faster, cheaper, and painless.

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  3. 3. jacolynfs 03:03 PM 12/10/09

    i agree with everything Dr. Barb said. i do not agree with death penalty at all! if the people think they must use lethal injection then why not use just air? i mean its cheaper, easier, and its fast with NO pain..think about it once air is injected into someone, they automatically die within seconds.

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