Abstract

More than 70 years have passed since the beginning of the Public Health Service syphilis study in Tuskegee, Alabama, and it has been over a decade since President Bill Clinton formally apologized for it and held a ceremony for the Tuskegee study participants. The official launching of the Tuskegee University National Center for Bioethics in Research and Health Care took place two years after President Clinton’s apology. How might we fittingly discuss the Center’s 10th Anniversary and the topic Commemorating 10 Years: Ethical Perspectives on Origin and Destiny? Over a decade ago, a series of writers, many of them African Americans, wrote a text entitled African-American Perspectives on Biomedical Ethics; their text was partly responsible for a prolonged reflection by others to produce a subsequent work, African American Bioethics: Culture, Race and Identity. What is the relationship between the discipline of bioethics and African American culture? This and related questions are explored in this commentary.

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