French Doctor Apologizes For Suggesting Africans Be Used As COVID-19 Test Subjects


Dr. Jean-Paul Mira, the French doctor who received backlash for suggesting Coronavirus treatment testing should start in Africa, has since apologized.

One the French doctors who proposed that testing for Coronavirus treatment should begin in Africa because they supposedly “don’t protect themselves” has since apologized, after facing serious backlash for his insensitive and ignorant suggestion. On Wednesday, Dr. Jean-Paul Mira, he head intensive care at the Cochin Hospital in Paris, appeared in an interview on French television channel, LCI, alongside fellow physician, Camille Locht to discuss the coronavirus pandemic. At one point, Mira actually proposed that testing for COVID-19 treatments should begin in Africa.

“If I can be provocative,” Mira began, “shouldn’t we do this study in Africa where there are no masks, no treatment, no intensive care? “A bit like we did in some studies on AIDS. We tried things on prostitutes because they are highly exposed and do not protect themselves.” Locht, the research director at the French National Institute Health and Medical Research, agreed with Mira, adding that they were already considering “a parallel study in Africa.” Both them were heavily criticized by the public for their outrageous ideas, including by Star Wars actor, John Boyega, who tweeted, “Africa isn’t a testing lab you pieces sh*t.”

Mira has since apologized for what he said. “I want to present all my apologies to those who were hurt, shocked and felt insulted by the remarks that I clumsily expressed on TV] this week,” he said in a statement. Africa currently has the lowest number confirmed coronavirus cases out all six continents, although it has been suggested that these statistics are merely a result poor access to testing. The virus hit Europe and North America the worst.