An Ill-bred Culture of Experimentation: Malaria Therapy and Race in the United States Public Health Service Laboratory at the South Carolina State Hospital, 1932-1952.

African American Digital Humanities Hospital Malaria Medical Experimentation Psychiatry Race Social Justice

Journal

Journal of the history of medicine and allied sciences
ISSN: 1468-4373
Titre abrégé: J Hist Med Allied Sci
Pays: England
ID NLM: 0413415

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
10 Nov 2023
Historique:
medline: 11 11 2023
pubmed: 11 11 2023
entrez: 11 11 2023
Statut: aheadofprint

Résumé

While most are aware of the Tuskegee syphilis experiments in which African American syphilis patients went untreated, less is known about experiments with malaria fever therapy conducted upon syphilis patients during the same period by the Unites States Public Health Service at the Williams Laboratory on the grounds of the South Carolina State Hospital (SCSH) in Columbia, SC. Over a twenty-year period, physicians maintained patients as malaria reservoirs for patient-to-patient inoculation and subjected patients to extreme fevers and thousands upon thousands of insect bites as part of a program in which one disease was tested as therapy for another. Using extant administrative files, medical journals from the period, and a database created from SCSH annual reports, this paper considers the ethics of malaria fever therapy experiments while exposing the conditions under which patients suffered the intersecting oppressions of race, class, and mental illness. It illuminates the prevalent scientific racism of the period that enabled pseudo-medical assumptions about African Americans' perceived penchant for poverty, deviant sex, and pain tolerance, which combined to enable a culture of experimentation that influenced events at Stateville Penitentiary and continued long after penicillin became widely available.

Identifiants

pubmed: 37950908
pii: 7405417
doi: 10.1093/jhmas/jrad063
pii:
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Informations de copyright

© The Author(s) 2023. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved. For permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oup.com.

Auteurs

Bradford Charles Pelletier (BC)

CUNY Graduate Center, New York, USA.

Classifications MeSH