In the early 20th century, as segregation tightened its grip on America, a silent epidemic raged: syphilis. The diagnostic tools were unreliable, complex, and devastatingly prone to error. Enter Dr. William Augustus Hinton (18831959), a Black pathologist working in the overlooked laboratories of the Massachusetts public health system.
Through decades of meticulous research, Dr. Hinton perfected the Hinton Flocculation Test, a diagnostic method so accurate, fast, and stable that it became indispensable. It wasn't political pressure, but unimpeachable scientific truth, that forced the medical establishment to recognize his genius. In 1936, Dr. Hinton was appointed the first African American professor in the history of Harvard University.
This book tells the powerful story of a quiet pioneer who used the objective language of the laboratory to achieve radical social change. It is the definitive account of how one man's relentless pursuit of perfection in pathology saved countless lives, educated a generation of physicians, and permanently altered the landscape of American science and higher education. Approx.160 pages, 31500 word count
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