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Tuskegee Experiment

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MEMORANDUM
To: Dr. Hira and Dr. Middendorf, Science and Public Policy Professor
From: Ayanna Dallas, Howard University Student
Date: March 21, 2016
Subject: Tuskegee Study: “Study” or “Experiment”
Introduction
According to Carol A. Heintzelman (2003, Vol. 10, No. 4), the Tuskegee study of untreated syphilis in the African American male was the longest nontherapeutic experiment on human beings in medical history. The study began in 1932 in Macon County, Alabama, where the government used 600 men in a forty-year experiment. The purpose of the Tuskegee study was to record the history of syphilis in blacks, but to ultimately determine if syphilis had the same effect on African Americans as whites. The African American men were told that they …show more content…

The disease is broken down into three stages. Within ten to ninety days after becoming infected, a small red pimple will appear, usually on the genitals. There is usually no pain or soreness. In the second stage, several weeks after becoming infected, a rash will appear on the soles of feet or palms. Some develop hair loss, fever, open ulcers, headaches, etc. During the third stage, which can last up to years, the bacteria attacks the cardiovascular and neurological systems of the body and can only be detected through blood tests. In this stage, the patient can suffer from mental illness, become blind and/or deaf, etc. Fred Grey (1998, p. 37) noted that “Syphilis was a terrible disease. It still is, of course… In 1932, that was not the case… the Tuskegee Syphilis Study at a time when there was no simple solution to what amounted to an epidemic among certain population …show more content…

The experiment of this study was to take African American males, inject them with syphilis, and watch their reaction to the disease. A total of 600 men were in this experiment. 399 of the men had syphilis and were a part of the experimental group and 201 men were in the control group. The experiment took many ethical turns from what it was originally supposed to be. Though the men were not being treated because there was no cure for syphilis in 1932, they could have been in 1945. In 1945, penicillin was accepted as a treatment of for syphilis. Jones (1981 p. 17), “After 1955, penicillin was introduced as a syphilis good treatment, but was denied to the participants because treatment at a late stage would be harmful”. Between 1950 and 1965, the experiment continued as a regular routine though men were dying and in 1972, the study ended. The results of this experiment was that all 600 men died from not being treated with penicillin or any type of medicine and the conclusion is that the doctor’s hypothesis was proven incorrect. African American men do react the same as white men to syphilis; if not treated, you

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