“All I knew was that they just kept saying I had the bad blood—they never mentioned syphilis to me, not even once,” said Tuskegee Syphilis Study participant Charles Pollard. Mr. Pollard was referring to the early 1930’s, when he was a participant in the Tuskegee Study. He was also one of the last eight living participants when Pres. Bill Clinton apologized to the men at the White House in 1997, saying “they were denied help, and they were lied to by their Government.” Unfortunately, in 2010 another medical injustice has been uncovered—the case of a Baltimore woman who died in 1951 nearly at the half-point mark of the noted Tuskegee Study. Bioethics is basically the study of the ethical issues brought about by advances in medicine. As we exp...
Beginning in 1932, the federal government sponsored a study to examine the impact of syphilis involv...
In the 1940s, with the disclosure that Nazi doctors had conducted experiments on humans, the term re...
The general distrust that African-Americans have of clinical trial research goes back a long way. Hi...
“All I knew was that they just kept saying I had the bad blood—they never mentioned syphilis to me, ...
One of history's most glaring violation of medical ethics occurred in Tuskegee, Ala. That was when f...
On May 16, 1997, in the East Room of the White House, President Bill Clinton issued a formal apology...
Racial difference has been of central concern in many canonical cases in bioethics. Consider two his...
For forty years, the United States government allowed economically disadvantaged African American me...
OBJECTIVES: We compared the influence of awareness of the Tuskegee Syphilis Study and the presiden...
The year 2012 marks the eightieth anniversary of the beginning of the U.S. Public Health Service’s ...
The U.S. Public Health Service Study at Tuskegee, conducted from 1932-1972, is widely considered a p...
What was done cannot be undone, but we can end the silence … We cannot be one America when a whole s...
The year 1947 was a watershed for medical ethics and medical care. Fifty years ago, the Nuremberg Co...
When Ernest Hendon died in January 2004 at the age of 96, a closure finally came to the Tuskegee Stu...
The aim of this paper is to look into the human rights violations committed by the United States aga...
Beginning in 1932, the federal government sponsored a study to examine the impact of syphilis involv...
In the 1940s, with the disclosure that Nazi doctors had conducted experiments on humans, the term re...
The general distrust that African-Americans have of clinical trial research goes back a long way. Hi...
“All I knew was that they just kept saying I had the bad blood—they never mentioned syphilis to me, ...
One of history's most glaring violation of medical ethics occurred in Tuskegee, Ala. That was when f...
On May 16, 1997, in the East Room of the White House, President Bill Clinton issued a formal apology...
Racial difference has been of central concern in many canonical cases in bioethics. Consider two his...
For forty years, the United States government allowed economically disadvantaged African American me...
OBJECTIVES: We compared the influence of awareness of the Tuskegee Syphilis Study and the presiden...
The year 2012 marks the eightieth anniversary of the beginning of the U.S. Public Health Service’s ...
The U.S. Public Health Service Study at Tuskegee, conducted from 1932-1972, is widely considered a p...
What was done cannot be undone, but we can end the silence … We cannot be one America when a whole s...
The year 1947 was a watershed for medical ethics and medical care. Fifty years ago, the Nuremberg Co...
When Ernest Hendon died in January 2004 at the age of 96, a closure finally came to the Tuskegee Stu...
The aim of this paper is to look into the human rights violations committed by the United States aga...
Beginning in 1932, the federal government sponsored a study to examine the impact of syphilis involv...
In the 1940s, with the disclosure that Nazi doctors had conducted experiments on humans, the term re...
The general distrust that African-Americans have of clinical trial research goes back a long way. Hi...