Sunday, 28 April, 2024
HomeNews UpdateRecords from notorious US Tuskegee syphilis study now online

Records from notorious US Tuskegee syphilis study now online

A cache of documents related to America’s Tuskegee syphilis study – a 40-year experiment that tracked infected black men without treating them – has now been digitised for public use, the country’s National Library of Medicine has announced.

The documents concern one of medical history’s bleakest chapters, reports The Washington Post. In 1932, officials from the US Public Health Service recruited 600 impoverished black men in Alabama, promising them years of free medical care, burial insurance and treatment for an ailment known as “bad blood”.

The disease actually was syphilis, and 399 of the participants already had the latent form of the sexually transmitted disease, which was not curable at the time.

Doctors tracked them for 40 years and even gave them placebo pills, but they did not treat them for syphilis even when penicillin, now considered a front-line treatment, became widely available. Meanwhile, up to 100 died.

The programme continued nonetheless. None had given informed consent.

Participants and their descendants discovered the experiment’s existence only after a whistle-blower leak in 1972, leading to public outcry, a presidential apology and legal reform.

The newly digitised collection includes more than 3 000 documents, from the study’s inception in the 1930s to the work of the panel that investigated its conduct in the 1970s.

In its final report, part of the collection, the panel concluded the study was unjustified, “scientifically unsound” and should have included penicillin treatment once it became available.

The experiment still casts a shadow on biomedical research and modern-day medical mistrust. One 2017 analysis connected its dramatic public disclosure in the 1970s to a drop in both healthcare use and life expectancy for older black men.

Although the last survivor died in 2004, 10 of their children continue to receive medical and health benefits through a government-funded programme, according to the US Centres for Disease Control and Prevention’s website.

The National Library of Medicine says digitising the documents will “ensure this chapter in history is never repeated and build greater trust in current biomedical research through transparency”.

Although treatable, syphilis continues to circulate in the general population. The CDC recorded 176 713 cases of syphilis in 2021 – a 74% increase since 2017.

 

The Washington Post article – Records from notorious US Tuskegee syphilis study now available online (Restricted access)

 

See more from MedicalBrief archives:

 

New York fund apologises for role in 40-year Tuskegee syphilis study

 

Concern as syphilis cases in babies, women, skyrocket in Canada and US

 

Return of syphilis in US

 

WHO circumcision campaigns in Africa ‘systemically racist, unethical and neocolonial’

 

 

MedicalBrief — our free weekly e-newsletter

We'd appreciate as much information as possible, however only an email address is required.