The Guatemala syphilis study, unearthed by medical historian, Susan M. Reverby, is another shocking and sadly familiar example of the abuse of human subjects in research. Ms. Reverby will present her findings in a webinar titled The Guatemalan Inoculation Study: Susan M. Reverby on Research Ethics and Lessons for HRPPs, which will address the horrific story of US public health researchers intentionally infecting hundreds of people in Guatemala, including mental patients, with gonorrhea and syphilis without their knowledge. A professor at Wellesley College who has published two books about the US Public Health Service Syphilis study that took place in Tuskegee, AL, Ms. Reverby will share her findings and insights on what today’s research pro...
The words “human medical experimentation” conjure up visions of Nazi medicine, which has come to exe...
Gruesome details of American-run venereal disease experiments on Guatemalan prisoners, soldiers and ...
A presidential panel investigating a controversial 1940s medical research project in Guatemala led b...
The Guatemala syphilis study, unearthed by medical historian, Susan M. Reverby, is another shocking ...
Research on Syphilis in Guatemala in the 1940s: History, Context, and Contemporary Concerns is a Pan...
Unethical uses of humans as research subjects represent appalling chapters in the history of medicin...
Between 1946 and 1948, Guatemalan prostitutes were hired by American medical researchers to engage i...
The U.S. Public Health Serviceâ s sexually transmitted disease (STD) experiments in Guatemala are a...
Between 1946 and 1948, researchers sponsored by the United States government intentionally exposed m...
A presidential panel on Monday disclosed shocking new details of U.S. medical experiments done in Gu...
From 1946–1948, the U.S. Public Health Service (USPHS) Venereal Disease Research Laboratory (VDRL) a...
I use the Guatemala STD Study as a case study for modern bioethics and public policy surrounding pha...
Mining Bodies explores the history of U.S. experimentation in the Central American and Caribbean reg...
Historians have not shied away from venereal disease as a subject; however, the history of the corre...
textThe U.S. Public Health Service led human-subject experiments in Guatemala during the late 1940s ...
The words “human medical experimentation” conjure up visions of Nazi medicine, which has come to exe...
Gruesome details of American-run venereal disease experiments on Guatemalan prisoners, soldiers and ...
A presidential panel investigating a controversial 1940s medical research project in Guatemala led b...
The Guatemala syphilis study, unearthed by medical historian, Susan M. Reverby, is another shocking ...
Research on Syphilis in Guatemala in the 1940s: History, Context, and Contemporary Concerns is a Pan...
Unethical uses of humans as research subjects represent appalling chapters in the history of medicin...
Between 1946 and 1948, Guatemalan prostitutes were hired by American medical researchers to engage i...
The U.S. Public Health Serviceâ s sexually transmitted disease (STD) experiments in Guatemala are a...
Between 1946 and 1948, researchers sponsored by the United States government intentionally exposed m...
A presidential panel on Monday disclosed shocking new details of U.S. medical experiments done in Gu...
From 1946–1948, the U.S. Public Health Service (USPHS) Venereal Disease Research Laboratory (VDRL) a...
I use the Guatemala STD Study as a case study for modern bioethics and public policy surrounding pha...
Mining Bodies explores the history of U.S. experimentation in the Central American and Caribbean reg...
Historians have not shied away from venereal disease as a subject; however, the history of the corre...
textThe U.S. Public Health Service led human-subject experiments in Guatemala during the late 1940s ...
The words “human medical experimentation” conjure up visions of Nazi medicine, which has come to exe...
Gruesome details of American-run venereal disease experiments on Guatemalan prisoners, soldiers and ...
A presidential panel investigating a controversial 1940s medical research project in Guatemala led b...