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Sorby Research Institute

Clinical researchConscientious objectionFood politicsFormer research units of the Medical Research Council (United Kingdom)Human subject research
Medical ethicsResearch institutes in the United KingdomScience and technology in South YorkshireUnited Kingdom home front during World War IIUse British English from September 2015

The Sorby Research Institute was a research facility that operated in the UK during and immediately after the Second World War in Sheffield, England. The Institute mostly investigated questions of nutrition. This was an important consideration in wartime Britain, where food was in short supply. The experiments into deficiency of vitamin A and vitamin C were particularly notable. However, other kinds of medical research was also undertaken, such as research into the transmission of scabies. The leading figures in the institute were Kenneth Mellanby and Hans Adolf Krebs. The volunteers were mainly conscientious objectors to military service. Some of the experiments were unpleasant, or even dangerous. The Institute closed in 1946, soon after the end of the war.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Sorby Research Institute (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors).

Sorby Research Institute
Oakholme Road, Sheffield Broomhill

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N 53.37302 ° E -1.504271 °
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Oakholme Road

Oakholme Road
S10 3DF Sheffield, Broomhill
England, United Kingdom
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Endcliffe Park
Endcliffe Park

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