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on Wed 23 Aug 2006 12:45 PM EDT |
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Cosmos
For forty years, from 1932 to 1972, 399 African-American males were
denied treatment for syphilis and deceived by officials of the United
States Public Health Service. As part of a study conducted in Macon
County, Alabama, poor sharecroppers were told they were being treated
for “bad blood.”In fact, the physicians in charge of the study ensured
that these men went untreated. In the 25 years since its details first
were revealed, the Tuskegee Syphilis study has become a powerful symbol
of racism in medicine, ethical misconduct in human research, and
goverment abuse of the vulnerable.
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