The US Government Ran A 40-Year Experiment On Black Men β€” And Let Them Die On Purpose

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Tuskegee experiment US government let Black men die for 40 years β€” from 1932 to 1972, the US Public Health Service ran the Tuskegee Study of Untreated Syphilis on 600 Black men in Alabama, 399 with syphilis, telling them they were being treated for “bad blood” while deliberately withholding all treatment to document the disease through to autopsy.
When penicillin became the standard cure in 1947, the government withheld it for 25 more years and blocked the men from getting treatment elsewhere. Men died, wives were infected, children were born with congenital syphilis. It ended in 1972 only after whistleblower Peter Buxtun went to the press. The study led to the 1974 National Research Act, informed-consent law, and a 1997 presidential apology β€” and remains a root of Black America’s documented distrust of the medical system.
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Key questions covered:
What was the Tuskegee syphilis experiment?
Why did the government withhold penicillin for 25 years?
How did the Tuskegee study finally end and what changed after?
#Tuskegee #BlackHistory #150Crimes
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Sources:
CDC β€” The U.S. Public Health Service Untreated Syphilis Study at Tuskegee (official timeline): https://www.cdc.gov/tuskegee/about/index.html

Study parameters β€” 399 men with latent syphilis, 201 controls, Macon County, Alabama, 1932–1972; “bad blood” deception; placebo treatments; spinal taps framed as “special free treatment”

Penicillin established as standard syphilis treatment by 1947; treatment withheld from subjects for the remaining 25 years of the study
PHS intervention with WWII draft boards to prevent subjects from receiving military-mandated treatment; local physicians instructed not to treat study subjects β€” Jones, James H. Bad Blood: The Tuskegee Syphilis Experiment. Free Press, 1981 (definitive history)

Dr. John Heller quote β€” “subjects, not patients; clinical material, not sick people”: Jones, Bad Blood

1969 CDC committee review voted to continue the study
Whistleblower Peter Buxtun; AP story by Jean Heller published July 25, 1972
Toll figures β€” up to 128 deaths from syphilis or complications; 40 wives infected; 19 children born with congenital syphilis: CDC / Senate hearing records (1973, Kennedy hearings)

1974 settlement β€” $10 million plus lifetime medical benefits (Fred Gray, attorney for survivors)

Clinton formal apology, May 16, 1997, with survivors including Herman Shaw present; last survivor Ernest Hendon died 2004
Belmont Report (1979), informed consent requirements, and Institutional Review Boards established in response to Tuskegee revelations

Guatemala syphilis experiments (1946–1948) β€” deliberate infection of prisoners, soldiers, and patients by U.S. PHS researchers; uncovered by Prof. Susan Reverby, 2010; U.S. formal apology to Guatemala, October 2010
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#Africanhistory #BlackHistory #BlackCulture

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