DATE: Wednesday, May 14, 1997 TAG: 9705140692 SECTION: FRONT PAGE: A4 EDITION: FINAL TYPE: Focus SOURCE: BY JIM YARDLEY COX NEWS SERVICE LENGTH: 38 lines
this date.] ILLUSTRATION: GRAPHIC
THE TUSKEGEE SYPHILIS STUDY
What it was: A study of 623 African-American men, about 400 of
whom had syphilis. The rest were uninfected men who served as
controls for comparison. The study began in 1932 and lasted 40
years.
Its purpose: To learn what untreated syphilis would do to a black
man.
How it worked: The men were given placebos, but weren't told.
They never received any treatment for the disease, even when the use
of penicillin became routine in the 1940s. When participants died,
researchers offered their families free burials in exchange for the
right to do autopsies.
How it ended: The study was stopped in 1972 after being exposed
in the media. A lawsuit was settled for $7 million in 1974. The men
and their relatives, 6,000 people in all, also were promised free
health care for life.
ASSOCIATED PRESS PHOTOS
MAP
ALABAMA
Send Suggestions or Comments to
webmaster@scholar.lib.vt.edu |