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1.
Ann Intern Med ; 176(6): 853-856, 2023 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37186918

ABSTRACT

The role of camp physicians of the Waffen-SS ("Armed SS," military branch of the Nazi Party's Schutzstaffel) in the implementation of the Holocaust has been the subject of limited research, even though they occupied a key position in the extermination process. From 1943 and 1944 onward, SS camp physicians made the individual medical decisions on whether each prisoner was fit for work or was immediately subjected to extermination, not only at the Auschwitz labor and extermination camp but also in pure labor camps like Buchenwald and Dachau. This was due to a functional change in the concentration camp system during World War II, where the selection of prisoners, which had previously been carried out by nonmedical SS camp staff, became a main task of the medical camp staff. The initiative to transfer sole responsibility for the selections came from the physicians themselves and was influenced by structural racism, sociobiologically oriented medical expertise, and pure economic rationality. It can be seen as a further radicalization of the decision making practiced until then in the murder of the sick. However, there was a far-reaching scope of action within the hierarchical structures of the Waffen-SS medical service on both the macro and micro levels. But what can this teach us for medical practice today? The historical experience of the Holocaust and Nazi medicine can provide a moral compass for physicians to be sensitive to the potential for abuse of power and ethical dilemmas inherent in medicine. Thus, the lessons from the Holocaust could be a starting point for reflecting on the value of human life in the modern economized and highly hierarchical medical sector.


Subject(s)
Concentration Camps , Holocaust , Physicians , Humans , History, 20th Century , Holocaust/history , Concentration Camps/history , National Socialism/history , Morals , Germany
2.
Isr Med Assoc J ; 24(7): 429-432, 2022 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35819207

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Dr. Joseph Weill was a French Jewish doctor who made significant contributions to the knowledge of hunger disease in the refugee camps in southern France during World War II. He was involved with the clandestine network of escape routes for Jewish children from Nazi-occupied France to Switzerland. Take home messages • During the Holocaust, in the ghettoes and death camps, a few research projects, mainly on hunger and infectious diseases, were performed by Jewish physicians and scientists • Jewish and non-Jewish prisoners were incarcerated within the notorious system of internment camps in southern France • Dr. Joseph Weill (1902-1988), a French Jewish physician and a distinguished member of the Résistance managed to enter the internment camps and medically assist the inmates in addition to performing systematic research and follow-up of those who presented with hunger disease.


Subject(s)
Concentration Camps , Holocaust , Child , Concentration Camps/history , History, 20th Century , Holocaust/history , Humans , Hunger , Jews/history , Male , World War II
3.
Isr Med Assoc J ; 22(4): 219-223, 2020 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32286023

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: In an effort to alter eye color during World War II, devout Nazi researcher Karin Magnussen had adrenaline eye drops administered to inmates at the concentration camp Auschwitz-Birkenau. A Sinti family, with a high prevalence of heterochromia iridis, was forced to participate in this study. Members of this family, as well as other victims, were later killed and had their eyes enucleated and sent to Magnussen for examination. Magnussen articulated the findings of these events in a manuscript that has never been published. The author is the first ophthalmologist to review this manuscript. The generation who experienced the atrocities of World War II will soon be gone and awareness of what happened during this tragic chapter of world history is fading. OBJECTIVES: To describe these events to raise awareness among future generations. METHODS: A literature review and archival search was conducted. RESULTS: Magnussen's research was based on an animal study published in 1937. For Magnussen's study, adrenaline drops were administered to inmates, including a 12-year-old girl from the Sinti family. As there was a reported case of deaf-mutism within the family, Waardenburg syndrome seems to be the most plausible explanation for this family's heritable heterochromia. CONCLUSIONS: The effort to change eye color was doomed to fail from the beginning because there was a probable diagnosis of Waardenburg syndrome. Extinction of humans for ophthalmological research is an insane act beyond imagination. For the sake of these victims, and for the generations who still feel their pain, it is imperative to tell their stories.


Subject(s)
Concentration Camps/history , Epinephrine/adverse effects , Eye Color , Human Experimentation/history , Iris Diseases/chemically induced , Pigmentation Disorders/chemically induced , Epinephrine/administration & dosage , Female , Germany , History, 20th Century , Human Experimentation/ethics , Humans , Male , Prisoners , Violence/history , World War II
4.
Pathologe ; 41(2): 168-176, 2020 Mar.
Article in German | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31932946

ABSTRACT

During the Second World War, the German Wehrmacht and the SS tested various chemical warfare agents on prisoners of concentration camps. The SS needed a pathologist to do this. Therefore Reichsarzt SS Ernst-Robert Grawitz recruited the 32-year-old Hans Wolfgang Sachs. Despite his position as senior pathologist at the office of the Reichsarzt SS, Sachs was spared interrogation and prosecution after 1945, although the prosecution presented a document about chemical warfare and human experiments during the Nuremberg medical trial. In this, Sachs was named as a participant in so-called "N-Stoff" (chlorine trifluoride) experiments. Little is known about Sachs to this day. This article is intended to close this gap. Of particular interest are the motives and reasons why Sachs joined the party and the SS, as well as his career after 1945.


Subject(s)
Concentration Camps/history , National Socialism/history , Pathologists/history , Germany , History, 20th Century , Humans
5.
Isr Med Assoc J ; 20(4): 203-206, 2018 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29629724

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The discovery of Jewish babies who were born in Nazi concentration camps and survived seems miraculous, but this phenomenon did occur toward the end of World War II. The lives of a small group of mothers and surviving children are of both historical and medical interests. Their survival shows additional support for the hypothesis that maternal nutrition can induce metabolic syndrome and bone demineralization in their offspring. Information obtained through direct contact with some of the surviving children is the basis for this article.


Subject(s)
Concentration Camps/history , Holocaust/history , Jews/history , Survival/physiology , Survivors/history , Bone Demineralization, Pathologic/epidemiology , Child , Female , History, 20th Century , Humans , Male , Maternal Nutritional Physiological Phenomena/physiology , Metabolic Syndrome/epidemiology , Pregnancy , World War II
7.
Psychiatr Q ; 88(1): 93-101, 2017 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27160002

ABSTRACT

After World War II, Sachsenhausen Nazi concentration camp (Oranienburg) was administered until the spring of 1950 by Soviet occupation forces (Special Camp Number 7) and used mainly for political prisoners. Our study analyzes suicides in this camp during the Soviet period. Data was collected from the archives of Sachsenhausen Memorial, Special Camp Collection. Original documents containing certificates or autopsy reports of prisoners who committing suicide were reviewed. In this period, authorities registered 17 suicides. The age of suicides was between 19 and 64 years. The most frequent cause of imprisonment was Blockleiter (Kapo in Nazi period, n = 4), Mitarbeiter Gestapo (member of the Gestapo, n = 3) and Wehrmacht (military, n = 3). Hanging was the most frequent method of suicide. The average time spent in the camp until suicide was 715 days. The number of recorded suicides under Soviet control is considerably lower (calculated rate 2.8/10,000 per year) than under Nazi control (calculated rate 11/10,000 per year). This could be due to comparably more favorable conditions for prisoners and the abolishment of the death penalty during this period. Possible motives for suicides include feelings of guilt for crimes committed, fear of punishment and a misguided understanding of honor on the eve of criminal trials.


Subject(s)
Concentration Camps/statistics & numerical data , Prisoners/statistics & numerical data , Suicide/statistics & numerical data , Adult , Concentration Camps/history , Germany , History, 20th Century , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Motivation , National Socialism/history , Prisoners/history , Prisoners/psychology , Suicide/history , Suicide/psychology , USSR , Young Adult
8.
Dent Hist ; 62(1): 15-23, 2017 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29949310

ABSTRACT

The removal of teeth containing gold fillings was part of the procedure in the concentration camps during WWII. This paper describes the part played by Nazi doctors and dentists.


Subject(s)
Banking, Personal/history , Concentration Camps/history , National Socialism/history , War Crimes/history , World War II , Germany , History, 20th Century , Holocaust , Humans , Switzerland
9.
Uisahak ; 26(2): 265-314, 2017 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28919592

ABSTRACT

When Japan invaded the Philippines, two missionary dentists (Dr. McAnlis and Dr. Boots) who were forced to leave Korea were captured and interned in the Santo Thomas camp in Manila. Japan continued to bombard and plunder the Philippines in the wake of the Pacific War following the Great East Asia policy, leading to serious inflation and material deficiency. More than 4,000 Allied citizens held in Santo Thomas camp without basic food and shelter. Santo Thomas Camp was equipped with the systems of the Japanese military medical officers and Western doctors of captivity based on the Geneva Conventions(1929). However, it was an unsanitary environment in a dense space, so it could not prevent endemic diseases such as dysentery and dengue fever. With the expansion of the war in Japan, prisoners in the Shanghai and Philippine prisons were not provided with medicines, cures and food for healing diseases. In May 1944, the Japanese military ordered the prisoners to reduce their ration. The war starting in September 1944, internees received 1000 kcal of food per day, and since January 1945, they received less than 800 kcal of food. This was the lowest level of food rationing in Japan's civilian prison camps. They suffered beriberi from malnutrition, and other endemic diseases. An averaged 24 kg was lost by adult men due to food shortages, and 10 percent of the 390 deaths were directly attributable to starvation. The doctors demanded food increases. The Japanese Military forced the prisoner to worship the emperor and doctors not to record malnourishment as the cause of death. During the period, the prisoners suffered from psychosomatic symptoms such as headache, diarrhea, acute inflammation, excessive smoking, and alcoholism also occurred. Thus, the San Thomas camp had many difficulties in terms of nutrition, hygiene and medical care. The Japanese military had unethical and careless medical practices in the absence of medicines. Dr. McAnlis and missionary doctors handled a lot of patients focusing mainly on examination, emergency treatment and provided the medical services needed by Philippines and foreigners as well as prisoners. Through out the war in the Great East Asia, the prisoners of Santo Thomas camp died of disease and starvation due to inhumane Japanese Policy. Appropriate dietary prescriptions and nutritional supplements are areas of medical care that treat patients' malnutrition and disease. It is also necessary to continue research because it is a responsibility related to the professionalism and ethics of medical professionals to urge them to observe the Geneva Convention.


Subject(s)
Concentration Camps/history , Malnutrition/history , Prisoners of War/history , World War II , Ethics, Medical/history , History, 20th Century , Humans , Japan , Philippines
10.
Schweiz Arch Tierheilkd ; 158(1): 27-38, 2016 Jan.
Article in German | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27132362

ABSTRACT

As part of the recent history of veterinary medicine in Switzerland, in Poland and in other countries biographies ofveterinarians among Polish soldiers detained to Switzerland during WWII are described. The information is derived from a number of Swiss and Ukrainian archives and personal contacts with descendants and colleagues of these veterinarians living in Switzerland and abroad.


Subject(s)
Prisoners of War/history , Veterinarians/history , World War II , Concentration Camps/history , History, 20th Century , Humans , Military Personnel/history , Poland , Switzerland
11.
Bull Hist Med ; 90(3): 363-393, 2016.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27795453

ABSTRACT

Recently declassified Gulag archives reveal for the first time that the Stalinist leadership established medical research laboratories in the camps. The present work offers an initial reading of the medical research conducted by and on prisoners in Stalin's Gulag. Although Gulag science did not apparently possess the lethal character of Nazi medicine, neither was this work entirely benign. I argue that the highly constrained environment of the Stalinist camps distorted medical science. Scientists were forced to produce work agreeable to their Gulag administrators. Thus they remained silent regarding the context of mass starvation and forced labor, and often perpetuated Gulag myths concerning the nature of diseases and the threat of deceptive patients. Rather than aggressive treatment to save lives, they often engaged in clinical observations of dead or dying patients. At the same time, a few courageous scientists challenged the Gulag system in their research, in both subtle and overt ways.


Subject(s)
Biomedical Research/history , Concentration Camps/history , Prisoners/history , Biomedical Research/ethics , Communism/history , Concentration Camps/ethics , History, 20th Century , Humans , Patients , USSR
12.
J R Army Med Corps ; 162(1): 44-9, 2016 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25957280

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: The Royal Army Medical Corps (RAMC) has justly regarded its relief of the appalling conditions found in the liberated Nazi concentration camp at Bergen-Belsen in April 1945 as one of its more glorious achievements. This view has, in the last decade, come under attack from historians who have, inter alia, criticised the nature and speed of the medical measures employed by the British. This has focused particularly on the management of the typhus epidemic, erroneously claimed to be the major disease killer of the survivors, and which was the catalyst for the premature German surrender of the camp to the approaching Allies about 3 weeks before the end of the war. This review examines the veracity of this statement and the nature of the evidence on which it was based. METHODS: Review of all the relevant extant primary source written evidence both published and archived in major collections in London, Washington and Belsen, in addition to the relevant subsequent secondary evidence. RESULTS: Disprove the ill-considered and scientifically flawed attempts to discredit the RAMC and demonstrate that the RAMC can be shown to have made the correct prioritising decisions in relieving starvation as well as in implementing the appropriate public health anti-typhus measures and to have acquitted itself honourably. DISCUSSION: Underlines the pitfalls of basing sweeping conclusions on an imperfectly understood inadequate selection of the available evidence.


Subject(s)
Concentration Camps/history , Epidemics/history , Military Medicine/history , Typhus, Epidemic Louse-Borne/epidemiology , Typhus, Epidemic Louse-Borne/history , Typhus, Epidemic Louse-Borne/prevention & control , Germany , History, 20th Century , Humans , Military Personnel , United Kingdom , World War II
13.
Medizinhist J ; 51(4): 295-326, 2016.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29845826

ABSTRACT

At a time when the last direct witnesses of the Holocaust are passing, new approaches to the restoration of 'lost' biographies of victims need to be considered. This investigation describes the potential of an international collaboration including surviving family members. Archival documents discovered in Jerusalem in 1983 concerned a discussion on the cancellation of a medical licence for a German Jewish physician, Dr. Leo Gross of Kolberg, who had been disenfranchised from medical practice under Nazi law. After applying for a medical licence during a 1935 visit to Palestine, Gross remigrated to Germany, where he was imprisoned in a concentration camp. No further information was found until 2014, when a group of scholars linked a variety of archival and internet-accessible sources and located a nephew of Gross. The nephew's testimony, cross-referenced against data from other sources, enabled the reconstruction of the 'lost' biography of his uncle and family, in fact a posthumous testimony. The resulting narrative places Dr. Leo Gross within his professional and social network, and serves his commemoration within this context of family and community. The restored biography of Dr. Leo Gross presents an exemplary case study for the future of Holocaust testimony.


Subject(s)
Concentration Camps/history , Crime Victims/history , Emigrants and Immigrants/history , Holocaust/history , Jews/history , National Socialism/history , Physicians/history , Germany , History, 20th Century
15.
Am J Psychoanal ; 75(3): 267-86, 2015 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26356774

ABSTRACT

Over 70 years, there have been different narratives of the Holocaust survivors coming to the United States. Survivors' stories begin with an event of major historical significance. Difficulties in conceptualizing historical trauma, along with common distortions and myths about Holocaust survivors and their children are examined. This article proposes that it is impossible to discuss the consequences of extreme suffering without consideration of historical meaning and social context with which they are entwined. The evolution of the social representation of the Holocaust and the contradictions in clinical attributions to survivors and their children with consideration of the future is described. Attributions to survivors and their children with consideration of the future is described.


Subject(s)
Holocaust/psychology , Survivors/psychology , Concentration Camps/history , Europe , History, 20th Century , Humans , Intergenerational Relations , Jews/history , Refugees/psychology , United States
16.
Medizinhist J ; 50(3): 223-48, 2015.
Article in German | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26536788

ABSTRACT

The purpose of this study is to evaluate the activities of the I.G. Farben laboratory at the former "Heil- und Pflegeanstalt" Günzburg. This laboratory was established to test the newly developed epilepsy drug "Citrullamon" and its derivatives. Specifically, the type and manner of the various experiments were examined to determine whether the suspicions of unethical human experimentation could be identified. The commercial and medical activities between I.G. Farben and the Heil- und Pflegeanstalt, including the specific roles of the senior physician Wilhelm Leinisch and the I.G. Farben chemist Arno Grosse, are reviewed.


Subject(s)
Anticonvulsants/history , Drug Industry/history , Epilepsy/history , Hospitals, Psychiatric/history , National Socialism/history , Therapeutic Human Experimentation/history , Biomedical Research/history , Concentration Camps/history , Germany , History, 20th Century , Humans , Laboratories, Hospital/history
17.
Am J Epidemiol ; 179(4): 413-22, 2014 Feb 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24284015

ABSTRACT

Until the mid-20th century, mortality rates were often very high during measles epidemics, particularly among previously isolated populations (e.g., islanders), refugees/internees who were forcibly crowded into camps, and military recruits. Searching for insights regarding measles mortality rates, we reviewed historical records of measles epidemics on the Polynesian island of Rotuma (in 1911), in Boer War concentration camps (in 1900-1902), and in US Army mobilization camps during the First World War (in 1917-1918). Records classified measles deaths by date and clinical causes; by demographic characteristics, family relationships (for Rotuma islanders and Boer camp internees), and prior residences; and by camp (for Boer internees and US Army recruits). During the Rotuman and Boer War epidemics, measles-related mortality rates were high (up to 40%); however, mortality rates differed more than 10-fold across camps/districts, even though conditions were similar. During measles epidemics, most deaths among camp internees/military recruits were due to secondary bacterial pneumonias; in contrast, most deaths among Rotuman islanders were due to gastrointestinal complications. The clinical expressions, courses, and outcomes of measles during first-contact epidemics differ from those during camp epidemics. The degree of isolation from respiratory pathogens other than measles may significantly determine measles-related mortality risk.


Subject(s)
Epidemics/history , Measles/history , Military Personnel/history , Concentration Camps/history , History, 20th Century , Humans , Measles/epidemiology , Measles/mortality , Pneumonia, Bacterial/etiology , Pneumonia, Bacterial/history , Pneumonia, Bacterial/mortality , Polynesia/epidemiology , South Africa/epidemiology , United States/epidemiology , Warfare
18.
Fam Community Health ; 37(3): 188-98, 2014.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24892859

ABSTRACT

In the name of public safety, the US government forcibly removed more than 110 000 Japanese Americans from their homes along the West Coast of the United States during World War II. Incarcerated in crude barracks located in remote locations, Japanese Americans were suddenly required to share laundry facilities, toilets, showers, and mess halls with hundreds of likewise incarcerated Japanese Americans. With conditions ripe for spreading communicable disease, public health nurses relied on health promotion techniques of the time to prevent epidemic outbreaks of diseases such as measles, polio, and tuberculosis.


Subject(s)
Communicable Disease Control , Communicable Diseases/epidemiology , Concentration Camps/history , Health Promotion/methods , Public Health Nursing , Arizona , Asian , Child , Colorado , Communicable Disease Control/methods , Communicable Diseases/immunology , Communicable Diseases/therapy , Contact Tracing , Female , Health Promotion/standards , History, 20th Century , Hospitals, Isolation , Humans , Immunization Programs , Infant , Infant, Newborn , Japan/ethnology , Male , Nurse's Role , Outcome and Process Assessment, Health Care , Perinatal Care/methods , Personnel Selection , Physician-Nurse Relations , Pregnancy , Program Development , Public Health Nursing/education , Public Health Nursing/organization & administration , Rural Population , Sanitation/methods , United States , Workforce , World War II
19.
Isr Med Assoc J ; 16(4): 208-11, 2014 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24834755

ABSTRACT

Born in Czechoslovakia, psychiatrist Leo Eitinger (1912-1996) became internationally recognized for research on his fellow concentration camp inmates. He graduated as an MD in 1937, but being Jewish was prohibited from practicing as a doctor. When the Nazis occupied the area he was forced to flee to Norway, where in 1940 he was again deprived of his right to practice medicine. In 1942 he was arrested and deported to Auschwitz. There, as a physician inmate, he was able to help and in many cases save his fellow prisoners, not only with his medical skills but by falsifying prisoners' documents and hiding them from their Nazi captors. One of his patients was Elie Wiesel. Eitinger survived the camps but was forced to join a "death march." After the war he resumed medical practice in Norway, specializing in psychiatry. With his personal experience and knowledge of the suffering of camp survivors, he dedicated his life to studying the psychological effects of traumatic stress in different groups. Eitinger's academic contributions were crucial in the development of this area of research--namely, the effects of excessive stress, laying the foundations for the definition of post-traumatic stress disorder and the post-concentration camp syndrome, thus facilitating recognition of the medical and psychological post-war conditions of the survivors and their resultant disability pensions.


Subject(s)
Holocaust/history , Physicians/history , Stress, Psychological/history , Survivors/history , Concentration Camps/history , History, 20th Century , Humans , Jews/history , Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic/history
20.
Harefuah ; 153(3-4): 215-8, 236, 235, 2014.
Article in Hebrew | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24791569

ABSTRACT

On 6th April 1945, nine days before the liberation of the Bergen Belsen Concentration Camp, about 2,500 Jewish prisoners were ordered to prepare to leave the camp on the next day. On 7th April, the prisoners left through the gates of the camp and began to walk about 10 kilometers to the train station near the city of Celle. There they were ordered to board a train that would take them to the Theresienstadt Concentration Camp. After six days of travel, the train stopped near the village of Farsleben, Germany, where it was liberated by the 743rd Tank Battalion of the 30th Infantry Division, of the U.S. 9th Army, on 13th April 1945. The 105th Medical Battalion of the same Division was the primary care provider for the survivors, who were then taken in vehicles available from the 30th Infantry Division, and organized into a convoy by the Division's Liaison Officer, Lt. Frank W. Towers, to the town of Hillersleben. A former German Air Force Base was located at Hillersleben with a small hospital that could not provide medical attention to all the survivors. On 21st April, Company C of the 95th Medical Battalion, received an order to go to Hillersleben. Colonel Dr. William W. Hurteau, the Commanding Officer of this Battalion, determined that the biggest task given to the Battalion during World War II, was establishing another hospital in the town of Hillersleben and providing additional beds in the existing hospital, which was a structure that had served as a boarding school. Furthermore, they needed to acquire hospital equipment which was obtained from German equipment and supplies that had been captured by the U.S. MiLitary. Also, they took care of obtaining food supplies from German warehouses, and meat and milk from local dairy farms. The lives of the prisoners on this train were saved by the heroism and dedicated work of those brave soldiers of the 30th Infantry Division and the 95th Medical Battalion.


Subject(s)
Holocaust/history , Hospitals/history , World War II , Concentration Camps/history , Germany , History, 20th Century , Humans , Jews/history , Military Medicine/history , Military Personnel/history , United States
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