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The Tuskegee Legacy Project: history, preliminary scientific findings, and unanticipated societal benefits.
- Source :
-
Dental clinics of North America [Dent Clin North Am] 2003 Jan; Vol. 47 (1), pp. 1-19. - Publication Year :
- 2003
-
Abstract
- This article is intended to provide a relatively complete picture of how a pilot study--conceived and initiated within an NIDCR-funded RRCMOH--matured into a solid line of investigation within that center and "with legs" into a fully funded study within the next generation of NIDCR centers on this topic of health disparities, the Centers for Research to Reduce Oral Health Disparities. It highlights the natural opportunity that these centers provide for multicenter. cross-disciplinary research and for research career pipelining for college and dental school students; with a focus, in this case, on minority students. Futhermore, this series of events demonstrates the rich potential that these types of research centers have to contribute in ways that far exceed the scientific outcomes that form their core. In this instance, the NMOHRC played a central--and critical, if unanticipated--role in contributing to two events of national significance, namely the presidential apology to the African American community for the research abuses of the USPHS--Tuskegee syphilis study and the establishment of the National Center for Bioethics in Research and Health Care at Tuskegee University. Research Centers supported by the NIH are fully intended to create a vortex of scientific activity that goes well beyond the direct scientific aims of the studies initially funded within those centers. The maxim is that the whole should be greater than the sum of its initial constituent studies or parts. We believe that NMOHRC did indeed achieve that maxim--even extending "the whole" to include broad societal impact. well beyond the scope of important, but mere, scientific outcomes--all within the concept and appropriate functions of a scientific NIH-funded research center.
- Subjects :
- Clinical Trials as Topic history
Clinical Trials as Topic psychology
Ethics, Medical
Hispanic or Latino
History, 20th Century
Human Experimentation history
Human Experimentation standards
Humans
National Institutes of Health (U.S.)
Pilot Projects
Research Design trends
Social Change
Syphilis drug therapy
Syphilis history
United States
Black or African American psychology
Clinical Trials as Topic ethics
Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice
Human Experimentation ethics
Patient Selection ethics
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 0011-8532
- Volume :
- 47
- Issue :
- 1
- Database :
- MEDLINE
- Journal :
- Dental clinics of North America
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- 12519002
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1016/s0011-8532(02)00049-6