American Decades
Shadow on the Land
Nonfiction work
By: Thomas Parran, M.D.
Date: 1937
Source: Parran, Thomas. Shadow on the Land: Syphilis, the White Man's Burden. New York: Waverly, 1937, 59–69.
About the Author: Thomas Parran, M.D. (1892–1968) was the director of the U.S. Public Health Service's Division of Venereal Disease in 1932, when the Tuskegee Experiment began. He was serving as U.S. surgeon general at the time he wrote this book.
Introduction
No one knows the origin of syphilis. What is clear is that Africans brought to the United States as slaves did not suffer from the disease before they encountered white men. Because far more African Americans than whites were poor and uneducated, they were less likely to receive treatment when they did contract syphilis. The treatment did not cure the disease, but studies had by 1932 proved that it reduced death rates.
The 1930s...
[The entire page is 5166 words long]
1930's Medicine and Health Primary Sources
- Opinions on Mental Health
- Radio Address on a Program of Assistance for the Crippled
- "Preventing Disease in the Nation"
- "Children Hurt at Work"
- The Tuskegee Syphilis Experiment
- Morale: The Mental Hygiene of Unemployment
- "Dear Mr. Hopkins"
- Prenatal Care for Rural Poor
- Consumer Protection Expands
- "Surgery Used on the Soul-Sick; Relief of Obsessions is Reported"
- March of Dimes Poster
- Shadow on the Land
- "Dust"
- Alcoholics Anonymous
- "Hot Lunches for a Million School Children"
- Copyright Page
- Acknowledgments
