Bad Blood: The Tuskegee Syphilis Experiment Hardcover – January 1, 1993
Author: James H. Jones | Language: English | ISBN: 0029166756 | Format: PDF, EPUB
Bad Blood: The Tuskegee Syphilis Experiment – January 1, 1993
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Direct download links available Bad Blood: The Tuskegee Syphilis Experiment Hardcover – January 1, 1993 from mediafire, rapishare, and mirror link Download latest books on mediafire and other links compilation Bad Blood: The Tuskegee Syphilis Experiment – January 1, 1993
- Hardcover: 297 pages
- Publisher: Free Pr; Exp&ed edition (January 1993)
- Language: English
- ISBN-10: 0029166756
- ISBN-13: 978-0029166758
- Product Dimensions: 8.3 x 5.4 x 0.4 inches
- Shipping Weight: 5.6 ounces
- Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #499,694 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #71 in Books > Health, Fitness & Dieting > Diseases & Physical Ailments > AIDS
"Bad Blood" is a carefully researched and excellently written account of one of the most horrendous and despicable acts perpetrated by the United States Government, the Tuskegee Syphilis Experiment.
In 1932, four hundred illiterate and semi-literate black sharecroppers in Alabama who were diagnosed with syphilis were selected for an experiment sponsored by the U.S. Health Service, whose purport was to demonstrate that the course of untreated syphilis runs differently in blacks as opposed to whites. It was "race medicine" of the worst kind and, as a newspaper editorial stated when the experiment finally came to light 40 years later, it was ethically on a par with the medical experiments in the Nazi death camps.
The men selected for the study were for the most part uneducated (only one man had reached the eighth grade and none had gone to high school), they were never explained the purpose of the study, and they were given no medicine to help their advancing symptoms. Even after penicillin was found in the 1940s to halt or significantly reduce the symptoms of the disease, it was withheld from the patients, who were left to suffer horrible deaths from advanced syphilis one by one.
In 1972 the experiment was finally brought into the open by a young law student who passed the information to the Associated Press, and when the story broke on Page One of newspapers across the country, it caused a national firestorm. Journalists, public officials, and ordinary citizens were outraged by the news accounts. Incredibly, when the doctors involved in the experiment were asked for an accountability, their response was a collective shrug and a "so what?
One of the least known facts of U.S. history is the government sponsored syphilis experiment conducted upon 399 African-American men from 1932 to 1972. Over the course of these five decades, the U.S. Public Health Service exploited African-American sharecroppers in its effort to determine if the long-term affects of syphilis were different for black people than it was for white people. During the trials, the doctors who conducted the experimentations intentionally denied these men treatment; never informed them of syphilis' destructiveness to their health; and ignored the fact that these men were infecting their respective wives and sexual partners with the disease. As the experiments continued, doctors calculatedly deceived the subjects, informing them that they were suffering from what was categorized as: "bad blood". As the disease ravaged the minds and bodies of these unsuspecting men, no effort was made by the physicians of the Public Health Service to either inform them regarding the disease or provide them with treatment in an effort to curtail its devastating effects.
Jones presents a detailed, non-sensationalized writing that delves into the ignorance, racism and outright inhumanity that was entrenched throughout the United States; the medical arena; and society in general prior to and during these horrific experiments. He provides a plethora of documentation to substantiate the bigotry and callousness of the medical field during the era, and acknowledges the data provided by individuals who participated in the experiments or who conveyed valuable information.
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