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
J Hist Med Allied Sci. 2023 Nov 10:jrad063. doi: 10.1093/jhmas/jrad063. Online ahead of print.ABSTRACTWhile 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 ...
Source: Medical History - November 11, 2023 Category: History of Medicine Authors: Bradford Charles Pelletier Source Type: research

Pathologizing Pathos: Suffering, Technocentrism, and Law in Twentieth-Century American Medicine
This article tracks the development of his theory of suffering and its global success in transforming tragic medical experiences into diagnosable clinical entities. Beginning with his intellectual development in the 1960s, this article traces Cassell's initial interest in suffering first to his early research on truth-telling and autonomy, followed by his pioneering work in bioethics. Although closely aligned with philosophy, much of the institutional success of bioethics came from American law, which affected Cassell's theorizing. At the same time, doctors experienced a growth in medical malpractice lawsuits, driven in la...
Source: Medical History - November 11, 2023 Category: History of Medicine Authors: Charlotte Duffee Source Type: research

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
J Hist Med Allied Sci. 2023 Nov 10:jrad063. doi: 10.1093/jhmas/jrad063. Online ahead of print.ABSTRACTWhile 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 ...
Source: Medical History - November 11, 2023 Category: History of Medicine Authors: Bradford Charles Pelletier Source Type: research

Pathologizing Pathos: Suffering, Technocentrism, and Law in Twentieth-Century American Medicine
This article tracks the development of his theory of suffering and its global success in transforming tragic medical experiences into diagnosable clinical entities. Beginning with his intellectual development in the 1960s, this article traces Cassell's initial interest in suffering first to his early research on truth-telling and autonomy, followed by his pioneering work in bioethics. Although closely aligned with philosophy, much of the institutional success of bioethics came from American law, which affected Cassell's theorizing. At the same time, doctors experienced a growth in medical malpractice lawsuits, driven in la...
Source: Medical History - November 11, 2023 Category: History of Medicine Authors: Charlotte Duffee Source Type: research

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
J Hist Med Allied Sci. 2023 Nov 10:jrad063. doi: 10.1093/jhmas/jrad063. Online ahead of print.ABSTRACTWhile 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 ...
Source: Medical History - November 11, 2023 Category: History of Medicine Authors: Bradford Charles Pelletier Source Type: research

Pathologizing Pathos: Suffering, Technocentrism, and Law in Twentieth-Century American Medicine
This article tracks the development of his theory of suffering and its global success in transforming tragic medical experiences into diagnosable clinical entities. Beginning with his intellectual development in the 1960s, this article traces Cassell's initial interest in suffering first to his early research on truth-telling and autonomy, followed by his pioneering work in bioethics. Although closely aligned with philosophy, much of the institutional success of bioethics came from American law, which affected Cassell's theorizing. At the same time, doctors experienced a growth in medical malpractice lawsuits, driven in la...
Source: Medical History - November 11, 2023 Category: History of Medicine Authors: Charlotte Duffee Source Type: research

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
J Hist Med Allied Sci. 2023 Nov 10:jrad063. doi: 10.1093/jhmas/jrad063. Online ahead of print.ABSTRACTWhile 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 ...
Source: Medical History - November 11, 2023 Category: History of Medicine Authors: Bradford Charles Pelletier Source Type: research

Pathologizing Pathos: Suffering, Technocentrism, and Law in Twentieth-Century American Medicine
This article tracks the development of his theory of suffering and its global success in transforming tragic medical experiences into diagnosable clinical entities. Beginning with his intellectual development in the 1960s, this article traces Cassell's initial interest in suffering first to his early research on truth-telling and autonomy, followed by his pioneering work in bioethics. Although closely aligned with philosophy, much of the institutional success of bioethics came from American law, which affected Cassell's theorizing. At the same time, doctors experienced a growth in medical malpractice lawsuits, driven in la...
Source: Medical History - November 11, 2023 Category: History of Medicine Authors: Charlotte Duffee Source Type: research

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
J Hist Med Allied Sci. 2023 Nov 10:jrad063. doi: 10.1093/jhmas/jrad063. Online ahead of print.ABSTRACTWhile 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 ...
Source: Medical History - November 11, 2023 Category: History of Medicine Authors: Bradford Charles Pelletier Source Type: research

Pathologizing Pathos: Suffering, Technocentrism, and Law in Twentieth-Century American Medicine
This article tracks the development of his theory of suffering and its global success in transforming tragic medical experiences into diagnosable clinical entities. Beginning with his intellectual development in the 1960s, this article traces Cassell's initial interest in suffering first to his early research on truth-telling and autonomy, followed by his pioneering work in bioethics. Although closely aligned with philosophy, much of the institutional success of bioethics came from American law, which affected Cassell's theorizing. At the same time, doctors experienced a growth in medical malpractice lawsuits, driven in la...
Source: Medical History - November 11, 2023 Category: History of Medicine Authors: Charlotte Duffee Source Type: research

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
J Hist Med Allied Sci. 2023 Nov 10:jrad063. doi: 10.1093/jhmas/jrad063. Online ahead of print.ABSTRACTWhile 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 ...
Source: Medical History - November 11, 2023 Category: History of Medicine Authors: Bradford Charles Pelletier Source Type: research

Pathologizing Pathos: Suffering, Technocentrism, and Law in Twentieth-Century American Medicine
This article tracks the development of his theory of suffering and its global success in transforming tragic medical experiences into diagnosable clinical entities. Beginning with his intellectual development in the 1960s, this article traces Cassell's initial interest in suffering first to his early research on truth-telling and autonomy, followed by his pioneering work in bioethics. Although closely aligned with philosophy, much of the institutional success of bioethics came from American law, which affected Cassell's theorizing. At the same time, doctors experienced a growth in medical malpractice lawsuits, driven in la...
Source: Medical History - November 11, 2023 Category: History of Medicine Authors: Charlotte Duffee Source Type: research

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
J Hist Med Allied Sci. 2023 Nov 10:jrad063. doi: 10.1093/jhmas/jrad063. Online ahead of print.ABSTRACTWhile 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 ...
Source: Medical History - November 11, 2023 Category: History of Medicine Authors: Bradford Charles Pelletier Source Type: research

Pathologizing Pathos: Suffering, Technocentrism, and Law in Twentieth-Century American Medicine
This article tracks the development of his theory of suffering and its global success in transforming tragic medical experiences into diagnosable clinical entities. Beginning with his intellectual development in the 1960s, this article traces Cassell's initial interest in suffering first to his early research on truth-telling and autonomy, followed by his pioneering work in bioethics. Although closely aligned with philosophy, much of the institutional success of bioethics came from American law, which affected Cassell's theorizing. At the same time, doctors experienced a growth in medical malpractice lawsuits, driven in la...
Source: Medical History - November 11, 2023 Category: History of Medicine Authors: Charlotte Duffee Source Type: research

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
J Hist Med Allied Sci. 2023 Nov 10:jrad063. doi: 10.1093/jhmas/jrad063. Online ahead of print.ABSTRACTWhile 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 ...
Source: Medical History - November 11, 2023 Category: History of Medicine Authors: Bradford Charles Pelletier Source Type: research