50 years after Tuskegee with Prof. Rueben C. Warren

50 years after Tuskegee with Prof. Rueben C. Warren

50 years ago, it was discovered that the United States Public Health Service and the CDC–the federal government–had left nearly 400 Black men with syphilis untreated for 30 years to study the long term consequences of the disease. They told these men that they were providing them free healthcare. The consequences of this inhumane, disgusting study still echoes among Black Americans today–leaving many deeply mistrustful of the healthcare institutions that are supposed to provide treatment. Worse still, the same attitudes about Black people continue to shape medical and public health interactions. Abdul sits down with Dr. Rueben C. Warren, Director of the National Center for Bioethics in Research and Healthcare at Tuskegee University and former Associate Director of Minority Health at the CDC, to talk about the history of the study and its lasting implications for health inequities.

Jaksot(308)

Screening Sunscreen? with Amanda Mull

Screening Sunscreen? with Amanda Mull

It’s early August–it’s hot and sunny. And for many people, it’s sunburn season. But the long-term consequences of sun exposure can be a lot worse than just a sunburn. Americans have fewer and worse su...

9 Elo 202233min

Presidential COVID with Dr. Megan Ranney

Presidential COVID with Dr. Megan Ranney

The president of the United States has COVID. Again. Abdul reflects on what this signals in the pandemic–and our politics. Then he sits down with Dr. Megan Ranney, Emergency Medicine physician and Aca...

26 Heinä 202247min

Big Leaky Tech with The Markup

Big Leaky Tech with The Markup

The fall of Roe has opened up the risk that authorities could use data from period tracking apps or internet searches in legal proceedings in abortion ban violations. But Big Tech may already be track...

19 Heinä 202236min

What the Discovery of Blood Flow Can Teach Us About Science Itself with Dr. Dhun Sethna

What the Discovery of Blood Flow Can Teach Us About Science Itself with Dr. Dhun Sethna

For most of human history, people believed that blood flow was a one-way thing. The discovery that blood flowed two ways–that there was a circulatory system–didn’t happen until the mid-1600s. And it t...

12 Heinä 202246min

How AIDS Activists Weaponized Art to Fight a Pandemic with Jack Lowery

How AIDS Activists Weaponized Art to Fight a Pandemic with Jack Lowery

As HIV/AIDS ravaged the gay community in the 1980s, the federal government was slow to respond owing to anti-LGBTQ stigma. ACT UP–the “AIDS Coalition to Unleash Power”–sprang up to hold government off...

5 Heinä 202243min

The Fall of Roe. Mailbag & Interview with Attorney General Dana Nessel

The Fall of Roe. Mailbag & Interview with Attorney General Dana Nessel

Roe v. Wade — the Supreme Court Decision protecting reproductive rights in America for half a century — was dashed last week. Abdul sits down with Prof. Kate Shaw, co-host of Strict Scrutiny to answer...

28 Kesä 20221h 18min

The Kids Are Not Alright with John Woodrow Cox

The Kids Are Not Alright with John Woodrow Cox

Another school shooting, more thoughts and prayers. But maybe this time its different. Abdul talks about the way that school shootings have shaped the lives, fears, and anxieties of a whole generation...

21 Kesä 202247min

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