For four decades, the United States government enrolled hundreds of Black men in Alabama in a study on syphilis, just so they could document the disease’s ravages on the human body.
SOUTHPORT, N.C. — Jean Heller was toiling away on the floor of the Miami Beach Convention Center when an Associated Press colleague from the opposite end of the country walked into her workspace behind the event stage and handed her a thin manila envelope.
“I thought, ‘It couldn’t be,’” Heller recalls of that moment, 50 years ago. “The ghastliness of this.”Lederer was working at the AP bureau there in 1968 when she met Peter Buxtun. Three years earlier, while pursuing graduate work in history, Buxtun had taken a job at the local Public Health Service office in 1965; he was tasked with tracking venereal disease cases in the Bay Area.
During a recent interview at her North Carolina home, Heller recalled putting the leaked PHS documents in her briefcase. She says she didn’t get around to reading the contents until the flight back to Washington. She even reached out to her mother’s gynecologist, a “straight down the line, middle of the road, superior doctor.”
They found an obscure medical journal — Heller can’t recall the title — that had been chronicling the study’s “progress.” Arrowsmith suggested they offer the story first to the now-defunct Washington Star, if it promised to run it on the front page.
Österreich Neuesten Nachrichten, Österreich Schlagzeilen
Similar News:Sie können auch ähnliche Nachrichten wie diese lesen, die wir aus anderen Nachrichtenquellen gesammelt haben.
How an AP reporter broke the Tuskegee syphilis storySOUTHPORT, N.C. (AP) — Jean Heller was toiling away on the floor of the Miami Beach Convention Center when an Associated Press colleague from the opposite end of the country walked into her workspace behind the event stage and handed her a thin manila envelope.
Weiterlesen »
AP PHOTOS: The character and the spectacle of Comic-ConSAN DIEGO, Calif. (AP) — Comic-Con is back in person, and back in character. The spectacle was everywhere in and around the San Diego Convention Center amid the crowd of tens of thousands of fans at the first full-attendance version of the pop culture phenomenon since 2019.
Weiterlesen »
2 in 3 in U.S. favor term limits for justices, AP-NORC poll saysAbout 2 in 3 Americans say they favor term limits or a mandatory retirement age for Supreme Court justices, according to a new poll that finds a sharp increase in the percentage of Americans saying they have “hardly any” confidence in the court.
Weiterlesen »
AP-NORC poll: 2 in 3 in US favor term limits for justicesThe Constitution gives federal judges including Supreme Court justices life tenure, but there have been recent calls for change.
Weiterlesen »
AP-NORC poll: 2 in 3 in US favor term limits for justicesAbout 2 in 3 Americans say they favor term limits or a mandatory retirement age for Supreme Court justices.
Weiterlesen »
AP-NORC poll: 2 in 3 in US favor term limits for justicesAbout 2 in 3 Americans say they favor term limits or a mandatory retirement age for Supreme Court justices
Weiterlesen »