Categories: History

The Tuskegee Experiment Was Revealed On This Day In 1972

The Tuskegee Experiment was a 40-year research project that studied the effects of the disease syphilis when left untreated. Black rural farm workers were the subjects of the U.S. government-sponsored study and were kept in the dark as they were being left to suffer. A whistleblower revealed the unethical and morally unjust aims of the study, after he went to the press on this day in 1972.

SEE ALSO: Zambian President Accuses Briton, U.S. of ‘Kissing Apartheid’ on This Day in 1986

For four decades, the U.S. Public Health Service (PHS) studied the effects of the untreated disease in 600 Black men from Macon County, Ala. Starting in 1932, 399 of the 600 sharecroppers to be studied were already afflicted with the venereal disease. The farmers were led to believe that they were being treated for “bad blood,” a term used to describe a number of unknown ailments. The Tuskegee Institute, also in Alabama, was the site where the study took place.

The PHS neglected to tell the men they were infected, and kept the news hidden. Even in the 1940s when penicillin was proven to be a sound treatment for syphilis, they were still left untreated.

Further, Black PHS workers and Tuskegee Institute members may have also been duped in to thinking they were doing the greater good, with Black nurses and assistants routinely corralled the men for blood samples and the like.

The syphilis spread to the families of the men in devastating fashion. By the end of the experiments, 28 men died from the disease, another 100 died from complications related to the disease, 40 of the wives contracted syphilis, and 19 children were born with congential syphilis.

Peter Buxtun, a White PHS venereal disease researcher, raised concerns he had with the study to the Center for Disease Control (CDC) in 1966. Buxtun felt that the study was unethical and was told that the experiments would continue until all the subjects perished. He was joined by a handful of other PHS employees who rallied against the study.

Amazingly, Black medical associations supported the aims of the study, although it isn’t clear how much they knew regarding the intentional withholding of treatment. In fact, the entire medical community seemingly supported the Tuskegee trials.

Buxtun bypassed conventional routes and was able to get the insidious nature of the study out to the public by way of the Washington Star. Buxtun revealed to a reporter the true machinations of the experiments, and major news outlets picked it up accordingly.

Sen. Edward Kennedy called several Congressional hearings over the matter, which Buxtun and other researchers testified. The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) filed a class action lawsuit, which later settled for $9 million. The settlement also included free treatment to the surviving study patients and their families.

In 1974, Congress passed the National Research Act, which helped develop guidelines for human medical research and was sparked by the findings at Tuskegee.

On May 16, 1997, then-President Bill Clinton apologized to the study participants and their families, calling the act “racist.”

Learn more about the Tuskegee Experiment here:

 

SEE ALSO: Gambia President Dawda Jawara Ousted from Power on This Day in 1994

D.L. Chandler

D.L. Chandler is a veteran of the Washington D.C. Metro writing scene, working as a journalist, reporter and culture critic. Getting his start in the late 1990s in print, D.L. joined the growing field of online reporting in 1998. His first big break came with the now-defunct Politically Black in 1999, the nation's first Black political news portal. D.L. has worked in the past for OkayPlayer, MTV News, Metro Connection and several other publications and magazines. D.L., a native Washingtonian, resides in the Greater Washington area.

Recent Posts

This Sudanese teen has tried to cross the Channel to Britain on a small boat over 100 times to see his mother

A 17-year-old migrant from Sudan, Abdul Usman, has attempted to cross the Channel from France…

8 hours ago

How these under-11-year-old sisters are making history in Maryland as CEOs

Tatiyana, Danyelle LaShay, and Jyniah Smith -- the Smith sisters -- are some of the…

8 hours ago

Mother-daughter duo set to graduate from nursing school in full circle moment

It's a full circle moment for mom Tangenicka "Tange" Williams and her daughter Chyna set…

11 hours ago

Fat Joe recalls how his followers made him lose $2 million

Fat Joe is widely known for hits like Lean Back, All the Way Up, and…

13 hours ago

From his living room, he launched a software company that recently raised $20m with clients like Ford

Get to know Jordan Taylor; he is the founder of Vizcom, a software company that…

14 hours ago

Mother charged after children walk more than a mile to Walmart alone

38-year-old Tanice Spence-Clarke was arrested and charged with child neglect without physical harm after police…

15 hours ago

Janet Jackson reveals she came close to playing Storm in ‘X-Men’ before the role went to Halle Berry

Janet Jackson might have wielded superpowers alongside Marvel's iconic heroes. But, it was Halle Berry…

16 hours ago

‘I would haunt your family for the rest of your life’ – Teacher allegedly threatened student who recorded him using racial slur

A North Carolina mother wants a middle school teacher to be terminated after he allegedly…

17 hours ago

Tiffany Haddish claims Common pursued her for two years before she agreed to date him

In a recent interview with PEOPLE ahead of the release of her Curse You With…

18 hours ago

King Charles orders Jamaican govt to pay Vybz Kartel’s legal bills after successful conviction appeal

Authorities in the United Kingdom have ordered the Jamaican government to pay the legal bills…

18 hours ago

Pacers star Tyrese Haliburton says his little brother was racially abused while watching him play

Pacers star Tyrese Haliburton has said that his little brother was subjected to racial abuse,…

3 days ago

This is how Reggie Bush got his Heisman Trophy back after 14 years

Reggie Bush has regained his place as the 2005 Heisman Trophy winner after over a…

3 days ago

Nick Cannon says he is a lupus warrior as he undergoes blood treatment after decade of battle with condition

Since 2012, actor Nick Cannon has openly shared his struggle with lupus to support others…

3 days ago

Here’s how much NFL draft’s No. 1 pick Caleb Williams will earn

Former USC superstar Caleb Williams has been drafted by the Chicago Bears as the No.…

3 days ago

Stephen A. Smith on the money mistake he made that got him fired from ESPN

Stephen A. Smith is an ESPN analyst. People widely regard him as the face of…

3 days ago