What Role Did Gender Play In The Tuskegee Essay

Words: 552
Pages: 3

. What surprised you the most?

I was surprised that the U.S Federal Government did a secret medical experiment on poor African Americans. People thought the treatment was supposed to treat Syphilis while it was only designed to study the effects of untreated syphilis. Also, Nurse Eunice Evers knew about the situation, but goes tell people of Tuskegee, Alabama about the fake promise.

2. Which scenes did you find depressing or sad? I found depressing or sad the fact the study select 412 men infected with Syphilis and promised to treat them for free which was known as “bad blood”. These men received a long fake treatment and they did not know about it until one of them joined the Army and he is cured by penicillin and came back to tell his
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They can be proud they survive from a scam and they were the poor people from the story, but their life changes and they became heroes because of what they been through.

4. What role did gender play in the Tuskegee study? We can see that gender play an important role in this study because they selected only men. These men experience a lot of pain because of the fake treatment. They did not choose women or children for the study.

5. What role did race play in the Tuskegee study?
Race played an important role because they choose only African Americans for the study. We can see that White people was making bad comment on African American and at the beginning of the movie, there was a white male with Nurse Evers who declared that “African Americans have the rate of syphilis in the country”.

6. What were the cultural and interpersonal forces that permitted the Tuskegee study to continue for 40 years?
White people had more power during that time and good jobs. Most of them work for the government and they knew about the fake treatment. However, African Americans who knew about the situation could not say anything in order to keep their