The Tuskegee Veterans Hospital and Its Black Physicians: The Early Years

Front Cover
McFarland, May 27, 2016 - History - 160 pages

When the Tuskegee Veteran's Hospital opened in 1923, many in the Veteran's Bureau believed that black physicians and nurses were not competent to staff the facility. Except for nurses' aides, orderlies, attendants and laborers, hospital personnel would be white. Recruiting and training black medical professionals was difficult given the obstacles facing blacks in obtaining education in medicine and gaining acceptance in the field. The history of the hospital reflects the struggle for racial equality in the United States.

This book describes the effort to integrate the Tuskegee Veteran's Hospital and follows the careers of the small group of well-trained, dedicated black physicians who played significant roles in its development as a treatment center for black veterans. The hospital's contributions to research and medicine are documented, along with its involvement in one of the biggest scandals in medical research--the Tuskegee syphilis study.

Contents

Preface
1
Introduction
4
The Opening of the Tuskegee Veterans Hospital
23
2 Health Care for Black Veterans
50
3 Responding to the Call for Black Physicians at the Tuskegee Hospital
64
4 Fullers Trainees
76
5 The Practice of Medicine by Black Physicians in the Jim Crow South
81
Challenges Successes and Scandal
89
ThirtySeven Years Later
122
Chapter Notes
129
Bibliography
139
Index
147
Copyright

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About the author (2016)

Mary Kaplan, LCSW, is a clinical social worker who has worked in healthcare and geriatrics for over 40 years as a clinician, administrator, educator, and community activist. She is retired from the University of South Florida School of Aging Studies, where she taught courses on mental health and aging, geriatric care management, and Alzheimer's disease. She is the author and co-author of six books and is an international speaker. She lives in Highlands, New Jersey.

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