Literature DB >> 17395849

Race and the politics of polio: Warm Springs, Tuskegee, and the March of Dimes.

Naomi Rogers1.   

Abstract

The Tuskegee Institute opened a polio center in 1941, funded by the March of Dimes. The center's founding was the result of a new visibility of Black polio survivors and the growing political embarrassment around the policy of the Georgia Warm Springs polio rehabilitation center, which Franklin Roosevelt had founded in the 1920s before he became president and which had maintained a Whites-only policy of admission. This policy, reflecting the ubiquitous norm of race-segregated health facilities of the era, was also sustained by a persuasive scientific argument about polio itself: that Blacks were not susceptible to the disease. After a decade of civil rights activism, this notion of polio as a White disease was challenged, and Black health professionals, emboldened by a new integrationist epidemiology, demanded that in polio, as in American medicine at large, health care should be provided regardless of race, color, or creed.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 17395849      PMCID: PMC1854857          DOI: 10.2105/AJPH.2006.095406

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Public Health        ISSN: 0090-0036            Impact factor:   9.308


  7 in total

1.  Medical progress and African Americans. 1947.

Authors:  W Montague Cobb
Journal:  Am J Public Health       Date:  2002-02       Impact factor: 9.308

2.  Trumpets of attack: collaborative efforts between nursing and philanthropies to care for the child crippled with polio 1930 to 1959.

Authors:  K F Carter
Journal:  Public Health Nurs       Date:  2001 Jul-Aug       Impact factor: 1.462

3.  Professional and hospital discrimination and the US Court of Appeals Fourth Circuit 1956-1967.

Authors:  P Preston Reynolds
Journal:  Am J Public Health       Date:  2004-05       Impact factor: 9.308

4.  Patenting the Sun. Polio and the Salk Vaccine. Jane S. Smith. Morrow, New York, 1990. 413 pp. + plates. $22.95.

Authors:  P M Mazumdar
Journal:  Science       Date:  1990-11-09       Impact factor: 47.728

5.  Professional education and poliomyelitis.

Authors:  C WORTHINGHAM
Journal:  J Natl Med Assoc       Date:  1951-01       Impact factor: 1.798

6.  Infantile Paralysis (Acute Anterior Poliomyelitis).

Authors:  J W Chenault
Journal:  J Natl Med Assoc       Date:  1941-09       Impact factor: 1.798

7.  Hospitals and Civil Rights, 1945-1963: the case of Simkins v Moses H. Cone Memorial Hospital.

Authors:  P P Reynolds
Journal:  Ann Intern Med       Date:  1997-06-01       Impact factor: 25.391

  7 in total
  5 in total

1.  Germs and Jim Crow: the impact of microbiology on public health policies in progressive era American South.

Authors:  Andrea Patterson
Journal:  J Hist Biol       Date:  2009       Impact factor: 0.818

2.  Development of the polio vaccine: a historical perspective of Tuskegee University's role in mass production and distribution of HeLa cells.

Authors:  Timothy Turner
Journal:  J Health Care Poor Underserved       Date:  2012-11

3.  Biomedical research's unpaid debt: NIH's initiative to support and implement fairer competition for minority students is a welcome step to redress the exploitation of African Americans by science.

Authors:  Winston E Thompson; Roland A Pattillo; Jonathan K Stiles; Gerald Schatten
Journal:  EMBO Rep       Date:  2014-03-20       Impact factor: 8.807

4.  Contagion, Quarantine and Constitutive Rhetoric: Embodiment, Identity and the "Potential Victim" of Infectious Disease.

Authors:  Julie Homchick Crowe
Journal:  J Med Humanit       Date:  2022-03-10

5.  Between Simians and Cell Lines: Rhesus Monkeys, Polio Research, and the Geopolitics of Tissue Culture (1934-1954).

Authors:  Tara Suri
Journal:  J Hist Biol       Date:  2022-03-01       Impact factor: 0.818

  5 in total

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