2002
DOI: 10.1353/bhm.2002.0186
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The Health Care Experiments at Many Farms: The Navajo, Tuberculosis, and the Limits of Modern Medicine, 1952-1962

Abstract: In January 1952 a team of medical researchers from Cornell Medical College learned that tuberculosis raged untreated on the Navajo Reservation in Arizona. These researchers, led by Walsh McDermott, recognized a valuable opportunity for medical research, and they began a ten-year project to evaluate the efficacy of new antibiotics and test the power of modern medicine to improve the health conditions of an impoverished rural society. The history of this endeavor exposes a series of tensions at the heart of medi… Show more

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Cited by 23 publications
(8 citation statements)
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“…Four papers were excluded because all or part of the patients were treated with chemotherapy. Most of these papers also did not contain sufficient follow-up time nor details to calculate 5-year survival or duration of disease [10], [110][112].…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Four papers were excluded because all or part of the patients were treated with chemotherapy. Most of these papers also did not contain sufficient follow-up time nor details to calculate 5-year survival or duration of disease [10], [110][112].…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Otherwise, one would risk making the same mistakes as Walsh McDermott and his team committed at the Navajo Reservation of Many Farms in America, when they set out to alleviate the burden of diseases for American Indians and narrow the gap in health between the natives and other groups in 1952-1962(Jones 2002. Otherwise, one would risk making the same mistakes as Walsh McDermott and his team committed at the Navajo Reservation of Many Farms in America, when they set out to alleviate the burden of diseases for American Indians and narrow the gap in health between the natives and other groups in 1952-1962(Jones 2002.…”
Section: Pursuing the Li: Towards A Conclusionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Otherwise, one would risk making the same mistakes as Walsh McDermott and his team committed at the Navajo Reservation of Many Farms in America, where they set out to alleviate the burden of diseases for American Indians and narrow the gap in health between the natives and other groups in 1952-1962(Jones, 2002. With good intention and great faith, the team successfully eradicated tuberculosis of hospitalised Navajo patients by turning every treatment into an experiment and testing the power of post-war medical technologies such as isoniazid, a new antibiotic.…”
Section: Pursuing the Li: Towards A Conclusionmentioning
confidence: 99%