2013Racism, seeking and breaking the Hippocratic OathA statement contained in an unsigned article in the Journal of the American Medical Association, gives the prejudicial idea: “'Virtue in la black race is like visits from angels: few and far between”' (Brandt 21). Nearly seventy years after Lincoln abolished slavery in the United States, racism and prejudice still coursed through the veins of many Americans, and their opinions corrupted medical research studies with corruption, prejudice, and flagrant disregard for ethics, as the Tuskegee syphilis case in 1932. This blatant disrespect for African American life left only seventy-four men alive of the three hundred and ninety-nine men who participated in the study. These men were chosen as research subjects based solely on the color of their skin and the fact that they were a “race notoriously riddled with syphilis” (Skloot 50). Southern states, known for their extreme prejudice against blacks in the early 20th century, supported the immoral Jim Crow laws, which legalized segregation in communities that were once part of the Confederacy. At that time, Social Darwinism became a popular theory among citizens and scholars. The theory contained extremely racist beliefs about the indisputable demise of the black population and was widely supported by the medical community. Doctors and physicians were referred to as noble and respected individuals, but these men shared the same discriminatory beliefs as the people in their society.Manes 2By 1932, syphilis, a highly infectious sexually transmitted disease, was widespread in black and white communities in the South. Since Macon County had the highest rate of infection, Dr. Taliaferro Clark decided that the study of “untreated syphilis in t…… half of the document……unit that had syphilis” (Gray 105). This study lacked reason, but more importantly, this study lacked morality. The Tuskegee syphilis study revealed more about the nature of racism than it ever revealed about the nature of latent syphilis. In the words of Maya Angelou, “Prejudice is a burden that confuses the past, threatens the future, and makes the present inaccessible.” Racism and prejudice have existed since the beginning of time and are present in our world today. The world can only hope that society progresses and understands that racism is a fancy word for ignorance. The Tuskegee case opened the eyes of many Americans and eliminated prejudice from the scientific and medical communities. It took forty years to end this unjust research study, but the painful and even deadly effects on its participants would remain forever.
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