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- 1From: EurAmerica. (Vol. 44, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedThe story of the Tuskegee Study of Untreated Syphilis in the Negro Male was broken in 1972 by Associated Press reporter Jean Heller, resulting in a public uproar. Eunice Rivers, a nurse, was the only person associated...
- 2From: Journal of the Alabama Academy of Science. (Vol. 72, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedFrom 1932 to 1972, the Public Health Service conducted a study of over 400 African American men with untreated syphilis in Macon County, Alabama at the John Andrews Hospital on the campus of Tuskegee University. (1) This...
- 3From: The Hastings Center Report. (Vol. 31, Issue 5) Peer-ReviewedCultural memory and the Tuskegee syphilis study: the Tuskegee Syphilis study is surrounded by illuminating misconceptions--myths that cannot be blithely dismissed because they actually provide some insight into the...
- 4From: Journal of Medical Ethics. (Vol. 28, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedEdited by S M Reverby. University of North Carolina Press, 2000, 52.50 £ (hc), 19.95 £ (sc), pp 630. ISBN 0-8078-4852-2 No one interested in the ethics of biomedical research will have failed to hear about the Tuskegee...
- 5From: Postgraduate Medical Journal. (Vol. 77, Issue 911) Peer-ReviewedThe Tuskegee Syphilis Study is often paired with the horrific Nazi experiments as the prime examples of what happens when powerless subjects, the state's coercive power, racism, and medical research are unmoored from...
- 6From: The Hastings Center Report. (Vol. 32, Issue 6) Peer-ReviewedTo the Editor: Regarding a recent article by Susan Reverby that introduced aspects of an article of mine on the Tuskegee Study of Untreated Syphilis (TSUS) to readers (HCR, September-October 2001), I offer a correction,...
- 7From: BMC Public Health. (Vol. 9) Peer-ReviewedAuthors: Ralph V Katz (corresponding author) [1]; Germain Jean-Charles [2]; B Lee Green [3]; Nancy R Kressin [4]; Cristina Claudio [5]; MinQi Wang [6]; Stefanie L Russell [1]; Jason Outlaw [1,7] Background The...
- 8From: The Hastings Center Report. (Vol. 22, Issue 6) Peer-ReviewedIt has been sixty years since the beginning of the Tuskegee syphilis experiment and twenty years since its existence was disclosed to the American public. The social and ethical issues that the experiment poses for...
- 9From: Case Western Reserve Law Review. (Vol. 67, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedINTRODUCTION For forty years, the United States government allowed economically disadvantaged (1) African American men to be exploited in the name of research, although the research could not generate any benefit to...
- 10From: The Hastings Center Report. (Vol. 22, Issue 6) Peer-ReviewedTwenty years ago Peter Buxtun, a public health official working for the United States Public Health Service, complained to a reporter for the Associated Press that he was deeply concerned about the morality of an...
- 11From: The Hastings Center Report. (Vol. 22, Issue 6) Peer-ReviewedTwenty years ago, when the Washington Star told the public that the United States Public Health Service had, since 1932, maintained a study of untreated syphilis in the Negro male that was still going on, my reaction...
- 12From: Journal of Southern History. (Vol. 68, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedEdited by Susan M. Reverby. (Chapel Hill and London: University of North Carolina Press, c. 2000. Pp. [xx], 630. Paper, $27.50, ISBN 0-8078-4852-2; cloth, $69.95, ISBN 0-8078-2539-5.) The use of human beings in medical...
- 13From: The Hastings Center Report. (Vol. 22, Issue 6) Peer-ReviewedNo scientific experiment inflicted more damage on the collective psyche of black Americans than the Tuskegee study. After Jean Heller broke the story in 1972, news of the tragedy spread in the black community....
- 14From: The Hastings Center Report. (Vol. 31, Issue 6) Peer-ReviewedSusan M. Reverby, "More than Fact and Fiction: Cultural Memory and the Tuskegee Syphilis Study," Hastings Center Report 31, no. 5 (2001): 22-28, at 28. Endnote 27 should state that George Reader delivered a personal...
- 15From: Nursing Standard. (Vol. 21, Issue 42) Peer-ReviewedWhat connects syphilis, Frank Zappa and an Alabama nurse called Eunice Rivers? If the question ever comes up in a pub quiz, raise your hand eagerly and announce 'Tuskegee'. Then sit back as your team-mates heap praise...
- 16From: Pharmaceutical Technology. (Vol. 31, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedWhen it comes to ethics, the adage "hind-sight is 20/20" is especially applicable. Countless medical and psychological experiments--such as the 1932 Tuskegee syphilis study or Zimbardo's 1972 Stanford mock-prison...
- 17From: The Hastings Center Report. (Vol. 30, Issue 6) Peer-ReviewedProtecting individuals who participate in research, although a requirement for federal research grantees for over twenty years, is suddenly a hot topic in some Washington circles. The renewed attention is the fallout...
- 18From: Obesity, Fitness & Wellness Week."This analysis assessed whether Blacks, Whites and Puerto-Rican (PR) Hispanics differed in their ability to identify the Tuskegee Syphilis Study (TSS) via open-ended questions following lead-in recognition and recall...
- 19From: Journal of Law, Medicine & Ethics. (Vol. 36, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedThe presence of the Tuskegee Syphilis Study was palpable at the June 16, 2005, Food and Drug Administration's (FDA) Advisory Committee meeting on BiDil, a heart medication from the pharmaceutical company NitroMed that...
- 20From: Science. (Vol. 284, Issue 5416) Peer-ReviewedA long-term study of the effects of syphilis in Tuskegee, Alabama was marred by social injustice as researchers misled and refused to treat hundreds of African American men suffering from the disease so they could...