50 years ago, it was discovered that the United States Public Health Service and the CDC–the federal government–had left nearly 400 Black men with syphilis untreated for 30 years to study the long term consequences of the disease. They told these men that they were providing them free healthcare. The consequences of this inhumane, disgusting study still echoes among Black Americans today–leaving many deeply mistrustful of the healthcare institutions that are supposed to provide treatment. Worse still, the same attitudes about Black people continue to shape medical and public health interactions. Abdul sits down with Dr. Rueben C. Warren, Director of the National Center for Bioethics in Research and Healthcare at Tuskegee University and former Associate Director of Minority Health at the CDC, to talk about the history of the study and its lasting implications for health inequities.
Ready or Not with John Auerbach
Forward to normal with Rep. Pramila Jayapal
The lessons we (haven’t yet) learned with Dr. Julie Morita
A ray of hope in a year of misery with Dr. Joia Mukherjee
Polling the Pandemic with Chris Jackson
Women out of the Workplace with Jane Oates
So, How Does This End? with John Barry
The Variants Episode with Dr. Angela Rasmussen
The First 100 with Brian Beutler
Racism is a Public Health Issue with Dr. Mary Bassett
We Need to Talk about Medicare for All with Dr. Micah Johnson
Fevers & Feuds with Dr. Paul Farmer
The Infodemic with Dr. Seema Yasmin
Black Scientists Matter with Dr. Kizzmekia Corbett
Mental health mailbag w/ Dr. Sarah Jukaku
The transition
The vaccine episode
The State of the States
Post-Thanksgiving mailbag with Dr. Syra Madad
The long haul
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