1912-1930年《南达科他州医学杂志》历史不公正调查。

Q4 Medicine
Madison Toll, Henry Travers
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引用次数: 0

摘要

历史学家最近对《新英格兰医学杂志》在延续医学上的历史偏见和不公正方面所起作用的探索,促使我们研究了《南达科他州医学会杂志》,寻找类似的主题。在我们的研究涵盖的1912-1930年期间,该杂志被称为《柳叶刀》杂志,该杂志的内容使用四类关键词进行搜索:美洲原住民、黑人、弱智和优生学。将包含关键词的相关文章归档到数据库(DEVONthink和Claris FileMaker)中,以便对材料进行系统检查。关于优生学,南达科他州的报纸也被搜索了。我们发现印第安人经常被诋毁为野蛮人,无法参与改变保留区环境的努力,以减少沙眼和结核病的双重祸害。黑人被错误地认为是不容易患沙眼的种族。优生学的主张被广泛接受,即那些被认为有缺陷、患有肺结核或弱智的人,包括许多印第安人,继承了他们的条件,并可以把它们传给下一代。对“缺陷”生育能力更强的信念加剧了人们的恐惧,担心他们会取代人口中的“正常”人,导致他们绝育,被转移到机构,并试图限制他们的结婚权利。在南达科他州,公众对优生学的支持主要来自妇女俱乐部。我们得出的结论是,在这段时间里,医生在《柳叶刀》杂志上发表的文章延续了对印第安人、黑人和精神障碍者的不公正看法,这极大地伤害了这些人群。危害包括人格限制、疾病持续存在、社会诋毁和种族偏见。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
An Investigation of Historical Injustices in the South Dakota Medical Journal 1912-1930.

Historians' recent exploration of the role of the New England Journal of Medicine in perpetuating historical biases and injustices in medicine prompted us to examine the journal of the South Dakota Medical Association for similar themes. Known as the Journal-Lancet in the years 1912-1930 covered by our study, the journal's content was searched using key words in four categories: Native American, Blacks, the feeble-minded and eugenics. Relevant articles containing key words were archived in databases (DEVONthink and Claris FileMaker) structured to permit systematic examination of the material. For eugenics, South Dakota newspapers were also searched. We found that Native Americans were frequently denigrated as savages and incapable of participating in efforts to change reservation environments to reduce the twin scourges of trachoma and tuberculosis. Blacks were incorrectly viewed as racially less susceptible to trachoma. There was widespread acceptance of the eugenic assertion that individuals regarded as defective, tubercular or feeble-minded, including many Native Americans, inherited their conditions and could pass them on. The belief in the greater fecundity of "defectives" fueled the fear that they would displace "normal" people in the population which led to their sterilization, removal to institutions, and attempts to restrict their right to marry. Public support for eugenics in South Dakota came largely from women's clubs. We concluded that physicians writing in the Journal-Lancet during this time perpetuated unjust views of Native Americans, blacks and the mentally impaired that significantly harmed these populations. Harms included restriction of their personhood, continued persistence of disease among them, social denigration, and racial bias.

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