Racism In The Film: Miss Evers Boys

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The Tuskegee Study, as exampled in the film “Miss Evers’ Boys,” was a horrendous example of the result of racism, a vulnerable population, and the manipulation of people not given the proper dignity they deserved, to benefit the majority class (Woodard). According to the film, in this study a whole community of African Americans went decades with identified cases of syphilis, being given placebo interventions and unjustifiably told that a later recognized intervention of penicillin shots were too risky for their use. Why would they do this? To gain knowledge; and they viewed the study as a “pure” scientific experiment, a human trial that would likely never be acceptable to have been conducted on Whites of the time, and under the full knowledge and aid of the U.S. government (Woodard, “Miss Evers’ Boys”). In the Tuskegee Study, individuals were mostly only informed that they had “bad blood,” as the communication of the details of syphilis in a way that the medical community understood it was thought to be too complicated or scary for them to understand, according to the “Miss Evers’ Boys” film (Woodard). Rather than giving them insufficient information about their medical condition, taking the time to educate them on what was presently known about their medical state in a way that they understood was arguably the more ethically responsible …show more content…

In addition to this, an institutional review board (IRB), if done properly, could’ve ensured the ethical process prior to it being conducted in such a manner as evidenced in the Tuskegee study. In my assessment, the lack of this IRB-like process and the allowance of this study, with full U.S. governmental knowledge, evidenced the extreme institutional racism inherent of the society in which the Tuskegee Study took

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