Purpose Of The Tuskegee Study

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to voluntarily consent for treatment for themselves. These groups include but are not limited to children, pregnant women, mentally disabled, elderly, and groups historically ill-treated. In these cases it is necessary for an unbiased third party to advocate for them. While it may seem appropriate to exclude these groups based on the fact that they are unable to consciously consent for themselves, this would not do justice to those groups that are affected by group specific conditions. Furthermore excluding these groups could lead to biases in research development (Schrems, 2014).
The Tuskegee study exploited the trust and lack of education of the men participating by not informing them of the purpose of the study and betraying their trust in medical professionals by misleading their belief that they were actually receiving treatment. In order
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While easy to put part blame on Nurse Rivers as both an African American woman betraying her race and a nurse betraying her calling to protect those she was charged to care for, it was a difficult financial time in the rural south. While this does not provide excuses for what she did, it may provide historical explanation. Researchers and medical personnel are duty bound to protect those that they are caring for and advocate for them. “Nurses working in trial recruitment face the formidable challenge of reconciling the conflicting worlds of clinical practice and experimental science and the corresponding deontological and utilitarian ethics” (Tomlin PhD,