Redirected from Tuskegee experiment
The Tuskegee Syphilis Study lasted from 1932 to 1972, when it was terminated after being exposed in the press. Since 1947, penicillin had been recognized as a safe and effective treatment for syphilis, yet the remaining members of the Tuskegee group of patients were allowed to sicken and die for another twenty-five years.
The Tuskegee Study represented one of the greatest failures of American medical ethics, and the subject of a presidential apology after the fact to the survivors and their relatives.
The Tuskegee Study has led to a lasting distrust amongst African-Americans of the medical community in general, and medical trials in particular. It has been speculated that this in turn has resulted in under-treatment of African-Americans, and their under-representation in medical trials, in turn leading to poorer medical care for African-Americans for decades to come.
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