SCXT 320
Science and Racial Prejudice
Consequences of Eugenics
The Contested Etiology
of Pellagra
Pellagra
- described in 1753 by a Spanish
physician asmal de la
rosa, "a
kind of leprosy," caused by humid air, foul wind, and faulty
diet.
- identified in 1771 by a Milan
physician as pellagra
(angry
skin) and thought to be
caused by the action of sun on skin.
- affected the very poor in both
countries.
- symptoms began with a pattern
of skin eruptions followed by diarrhea, lassitude, dizziness, and
a variety of mental disorders.
Thesis:
eugenic
beliefs in the hereditary susceptibility of "weaker stock" to this
disease unnecessarily prevented the development of effective
treatment for pellagra for at least two decades (1915-1935),
resulting in unnecessary debilitation and
death.
Source: Chase, A.(1977). The
Legacy of Malthus: The Social Costs of the New Scientific Racism.
NY: Alfred Knopf.