One of history's most glaring violation of medical ethics occurred in Tuskegee, Ala. That was when federal researchers experimented on close to 400 impoverished African-American sharecroppers who suffered from syphilis. The experiments started in 1932 and lasted for 40 years. Early in the study, researchers found that penicillin was an effective treatment for the disease; yet the U.S. Public Health Service purposely withheld the treatment from its Black participants for decades. The fallout from that controversial study not only led to a total reform of medical ethics as well as an avalanche of new federal laws and regulations regarding protections for participants in clinical studies but that study and similar incidents shattered whatever ...
Racial difference has been of central concern in many canonical cases in bioethics. Consider two his...
African American distrust of medicine has consequences for treatment seeking and healthcare behaviou...
The aim of this paper is to look into the human rights violations committed by the United States aga...
The general distrust that African-Americans have of clinical trial research goes back a long way. Hi...
The year 1947 was a watershed for medical ethics and medical care. Fifty years ago, the Nuremberg Co...
For forty years, the United States government allowed economically disadvantaged African American me...
In 1932 the U.S. Public Health Service (USPHS) initiated an experiment in Macon County, Alabama, to ...
“All I knew was that they just kept saying I had the bad blood—they never mentioned syphilis to me, ...
In the 1940s, with the disclosure that Nazi doctors had conducted experiments on humans, the term re...
The year 2012 marks the eightieth anniversary of the beginning of the U.S. Public Health Service’s (...
African Americans are still suspicious of the clinical research establishment, some 35 years after d...
n the 1940s, with the disclosure that Nazi doctors had conducted experiments on humans, the term res...
Tuskegee: could it happen again? The Tuskegee Syphilis Study is often paired with the hor-rific Nazi...
The Tuskegee Study, an observational study of over 400 sharecroppers with untreated syphilis, was co...
Modern medicine has almost inextricably intertwined non-consensual experimentation and exploitation ...
Racial difference has been of central concern in many canonical cases in bioethics. Consider two his...
African American distrust of medicine has consequences for treatment seeking and healthcare behaviou...
The aim of this paper is to look into the human rights violations committed by the United States aga...
The general distrust that African-Americans have of clinical trial research goes back a long way. Hi...
The year 1947 was a watershed for medical ethics and medical care. Fifty years ago, the Nuremberg Co...
For forty years, the United States government allowed economically disadvantaged African American me...
In 1932 the U.S. Public Health Service (USPHS) initiated an experiment in Macon County, Alabama, to ...
“All I knew was that they just kept saying I had the bad blood—they never mentioned syphilis to me, ...
In the 1940s, with the disclosure that Nazi doctors had conducted experiments on humans, the term re...
The year 2012 marks the eightieth anniversary of the beginning of the U.S. Public Health Service’s (...
African Americans are still suspicious of the clinical research establishment, some 35 years after d...
n the 1940s, with the disclosure that Nazi doctors had conducted experiments on humans, the term res...
Tuskegee: could it happen again? The Tuskegee Syphilis Study is often paired with the hor-rific Nazi...
The Tuskegee Study, an observational study of over 400 sharecroppers with untreated syphilis, was co...
Modern medicine has almost inextricably intertwined non-consensual experimentation and exploitation ...
Racial difference has been of central concern in many canonical cases in bioethics. Consider two his...
African American distrust of medicine has consequences for treatment seeking and healthcare behaviou...
The aim of this paper is to look into the human rights violations committed by the United States aga...