When Doctors Became Villains: The Tuskegee Syphilis Study
Description
Most people think the Tuskegee Syphilis Study was a secret government experiment uncovered by a brave whistleblower. It wasn’t. For forty years, the U.S. Public Health Service openly studied hundreds of Black men in Alabama who had syphilis—without treating them, even after penicillin became the known cure.
What’s rarely discussed is that it was never actually hidden. The study appeared in peer-reviewed medical journals. The Milbank Memorial Fund publicly supported it. Articles were published describing autopsies, complications, and outcomes. Even a 1969 CDC panel reviewed the study and voted to continue it.
In 1972, it wasn’t new evidence that stopped the study—it was public outrage. A social worker named Peter Buxtun leaked the details to the Associated Press, and the story finally reached the front page of The New York Times. Only then did the public realize what the medical community had quietly accepted for decades.
Robert and Anna unpack how something so unethical could be carried out in plain sight, why it took Congress and a Presidential apology to acknowledge it, and what it reveals about trust, race, and accountability in American healthcare.



