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INTRODUCTION: Holocaust survivors gave a significant contribution to Israel's fighting forces and to the victory in the War of Independence. Many of them lost their lives in the battlefields. Many doctors who were survivors took an active part in the war, and afterwards in the building of the base of public medicine in the country. The "Last Descendants" were those Holocaust survivors who remained the last remnant of their nuclear family (parents, brothers, sisters, sons and daughters), who immigrated to Israel, joined the army and fell in battle, thus ending forever their family legacy. One of them was Dr. Shlomo Gurfinkel. During World War II he was a member of the Jewish underground and served as a doctor in Vilna's ghetto and in the ranks of the partisans. In the War of Independence, he was a doctor in a "Haganah" battalion and lost his life in the battles in Jerusalem. By telling his personal story, we intend to throw light on the heroic actions of those Holocaust survivors, amongst them medical personnel, who came to Israel and joined the fighting forces, including those who were "last descendants".
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Holocausto , Médicos , Masculino , Humanos , II Guerra Mundial , IsraelRESUMO
Neurosurgery has benefited from innovations as a result of military conflict. The volume and complexity of injuries sustained on the battlefield require medical teams to triage, innovate, and practice beyond their capabilities in order to treat wartime injuries. The neurosurgeons who practiced in the Pacific Command (PACOM) during World War II, the Korean War, and the War in Vietnam built upon field operating room knowledge and influenced the logistics of treating battle-injured patients in far-forward environments. Modern-day battles are held on new terrain, and the military neurosurgeon must adapt. War in the PACOM uniquely presented significant obstacles due to geographic isolation, ultimately accelerating the growth and adaptability of military neurosurgery and medical evacuation. The advancements in infrastructure and resource mobilization made during PACOM conflicts continue to inform modern-day practices and provide insight for future conflicts. In this historical article, the authors review the development and evolution of neurosurgical care, forward surgical teams, and mobile field hospitals with surgical capabilities through US conflicts in the PACOM.
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Medicina Militar , Militares , Neurocirurgia , Humanos , Neurocirurgiões , Neurocirurgia/história , Estados Unidos , II Guerra MundialRESUMO
Many scientists were forced to leave Germany mostly under challenging circumstances as a result of the pressure applied to anti-Nazi German scientists and artists (mostly from the medical field) who were or were not of Jewish origin before World War II. They emigrated primarily to the United States, Switzerland, Turkey and South America. Two eminent pathology professors, namely Prof. Philipp Schwartz (from Frankfurt) and Prof. Sigfried Oberndorfer (from Munich) came to Istanbul University. They regarded Turkey as their second homeland. They were obliged to leave Germany due to mounting pressure. Schwartz settled in his father-in-law's house in Zurich. Schwartz was an organizer. He established the "Emergency Society of German Scholars Abroad" (Notgemeinschaft) to gather German scientists and artists in his situation. During the same period, the founder of modern Turkey, Mustafa Kemal Atatürk wanted to apply reforms at Istanbul University to make it attain a Western structure. He invited Swiss pedagogue Prof. Malche and asked him to prepare a report for this purpose. Malche highlighted the need for Western experts is advised. Contact was made with Schwartz's organization in Switzerland. Numerous scientists specialized in almost all fields of science starting with medicine as well as many artists came to Istanbul University and other public institutions. Schwartz established the Pathology Department at Istanbul University while Prof. Oberndorfer established the Department of Experimental Pathology at the same university. Schwartz enabled pathology to gain a contemporary identity in Turkey. Pathology was mostly focused on autopsy during those years. Schwartz attached importance to the pathology training of medical students. He initiated clinico-pathology classes and encouraged surgeons to take a biopsy for surgical pathology. He produced numerous publications. Schwartz worked in Turkey for 19 years and then moved to the US. Thus, a generation of pathologists following the footsteps of Schwartz was raised in Turkey. Frankfurt University, in which he was obliged to leave, erected a stele in his memory at the entrance of the main hospital building. Schwartz thus became an unforgotten savior.
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Socialismo Nacional , II Guerra Mundial , Alemanha , História do Século XX , Humanos , Socialismo Nacional/história , Patologistas , TurquiaRESUMO
The biographical article is dedicated to the memory of Boris Petrovich Ugryumov, a graduate of the Imperial Military Medical Academy (1914), a prominent military pathologist, the First Head of the Department of Pathological Anatomy, Ryazan Medical Institute. The paper presents the major milestones in the life of B.P. Ugryumov; his service on the fronts of the First and Second World Wars and his teaching activity at the Military Medical Academy and the Naval Medical Academy occupy an important place. For about 10 years, he was in charge of the Pathology Department, S.P. Botkin Clinical Infectious Diseases Hospital in Leningrad, which largely determined the area of his professional interests, such as the pathomorphology of infectious diseases, tuberculosis in particular. The archiving and personal photographic documents that have been previously unknown to the public are published for the first time.
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Medicina Militar , Militares , História do Século XX , Humanos , Patologistas , II Guerra MundialRESUMO
The forcible relocation of Japanese-Canadians (Nikkei) during World War II has been widely examined; however, little scholarly attention has been paid to the impact of relocation on the medical services provided to, and by, the Nikkei. This article highlights the issue of providing sufficient medical care during forcible relocation and the experiences of one Nikkei physician, Dr Masajiro Miyazaki. His story illustrates both the limitations in the healthcare provided to the Nikkei community during relocation and the struggle for Nikkei medical professionals to continue their practice during the war. The agency of the Nikkei-who constantly balanced resistance and adaptation to oppressive conditions-comes to the forefront with this case study. Dr Miyazaki's personal records of forcible relocation, as well as his published memoir, reveal aspects of the lived reality of one Nikkei physician who was not included in the government discourse, or in the dialogue among his fellow Nikkei physicians, such as inter-racial medical care. It is evident through this case that there was great diversity in the level of medical care which the Nikkei received during their relocation in Canada. Furthermore, Dr Masajiro Miyazaki's story proves that healthcare professionals, from doctors to nurses' aides who were both Nikkei and white, provided extraordinary medical services during the forcible relocation, despite significant constraints.
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Asiático/história , Assistência à Saúde Culturalmente Competente/história , Atenção à Saúde/etnologia , Médicos/história , II Guerra Mundial , Canadá , Atenção à Saúde/história , História do Século XX , Humanos , Japão/etnologia , Narrativas Pessoais como AssuntoRESUMO
The article is devoted to the biography and scientific contribution of Miron Semyonovich Vovsi, the eminent Soviet internist, organizer of army internal medicine. For the first time, the materials of his personal records from the Yuriev (Tartu) University and verified date of his birth are publicly introduced. Miron Semyonovich (Meer Simonovic) Vovsi was born on May 12 (24) 1897, in the township of Kreslavka (actually Kraslava, Latvia). In 1915, he entered the medical faculty of Yuriev (actually Tartu) University. In 1918 he was transferred to the Moscow University. He, after serving as military doctor, studied and worked under the guidance of D. D. Pletnev, I. M. Wiechert and V. F. Zelenin. In 1934, he moved to the Botkin hospital and after defending his doctoral thesis, became the head of the Department of internal medicine in the Central institute of advanced medical training, where he worked for more than 30 years. During the Second World War, he was the chief internist of the Red Army. He was engaged in the organization and improvement of army internal medicine. In 1952, during the so-called "physicians case", he was arrested and tortured for 5 months. After his release, he returned to teaching, medical and scientific activities. He died in 1960. His major areas of scientific contribution to medicine are nephrology, cardiology and army internal medicine.
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Medicina Interna/história , Militares , Docentes de Medicina , História do Século XX , Humanos , Masculino , Moscou , II Guerra MundialRESUMO
The authors describe the construction of a statue in honor of Professor Charcot, the father of modern neurology, in Paris in 1898, 5 years after his death. The Nazi invaders destroyed the statue, which was erected near the entrance to the Salpêtrière hospital with the support of his disciples and the international neurological community, in 1942 during World War II. An international campaign is now needed to rebuild the statue of this great neurologist.
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Socialismo Nacional/história , Neurologistas/história , Neurologia/história , II Guerra Mundial , França , História do Século XX , HumanosRESUMO
Walter C. Guralnick, a major figure in Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery, educational innovator, master surgeon and mentor died, surrounded by family, on September 6, 2017 at Massachusetts General Hospital, the institution he loved and served for 65 years. Like others of his generation, Dr Guralnick served in the Armed Services in Europe during World War II. Little was known of his activities with the 7th General Hospital and of his contributions to the war effort. This paper brings together material from military, local and overseas archives to provide an insight into his life and work during those years.
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História da Odontologia , Militares , Cirurgiões , Europa (Continente) , História do Século XX , Humanos , Masculino , Massachusetts , II Guerra MundialRESUMO
The authors describe the lives of several Jewish pharmacists and their families who lived and worked in the Czech Lands during the years 1918-1945. Their stories represented a typical mosaic, which corresponds to the fate of the Jewish community in the Czech Lands during World War II - all lost their property and the majority of them were murdered or lost their immediate families. Only a few of them succeeded to survive thanks to early emigration. Some of them lived until the liberation of the concentration camp Theresienstadt, too.Key words: Jews pharmacy shoah concentration camp Auschwitz.
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Holocausto/história , Judeus/história , Farmacêuticos/história , República Tcheca , História do Século XX , Humanos , II Guerra MundialRESUMO
On 10/23 December 1914 four-engine airplanes <
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Aviação , Medicina Militar , Militares , Aeronaves , História do Século XX , Medicina Militar/história , Militares/história , Federação Russa , II Guerra MundialRESUMO
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.
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Prisioneiros de Guerra/história , Médicos Veterinários/história , II Guerra Mundial , Campos de Concentração/história , História do Século XX , Humanos , Militares/história , Polônia , SuíçaRESUMO
This paper examines the impact of the political system change after 1945 on the appointment of paediatric professorships in the Soviet Occupation Zone and the GDR up until the time the Wall was built in 1961. It can be demonstrated that the political purge in the post-war period had only minor impact on the appointment of professorships and the National Socialist past no longer mattered after the conclusion of denazification. In 1957, the proportion of former NSDAP members among East German university professors of paediatrics was 100 per cent. When it came to new appointments, both members of the "bourgeois" academic non-professorial teaching staff from the GDR as well as paediatricians from West Germany, who had largely gained their scientifically qualifications under National Socialism, were in the running. A politically-controlled elite exchange did not take place until the construction of the Wall. State and party organs generally followed the personnel proposals of the universities since an insufficient number of qualified candidates was available for the systematic appointment of ,,progressive" paediatricians. Given the lack of staff, the SED personnel policy was aimed at the integration of previous elites, as long as they behaved loyally towards the new state. Since the East German faculties continued to make the questioning of the professionally competent professors in West Germany and East Germany the basis for their appointment lists, West German university paediatricians were able to exert considerable influence on the appointment of East German paediatric professorship until 1960s.
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Comunismo/história , Docentes de Medicina/história , Socialismo Nacional/história , Pediatria/história , II Guerra Mundial , Alemanha Oriental , História do Século XXRESUMO
The article presents the characteristics of prominent figures of the Russian medicine awarded by commander orders. Traced their combat path. Attention is paid to the merits of the organization and conduct of activities of medical support in operations.
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Medicina Militar/história , Médicos/história , II Guerra Mundial , Feminino , História do Século XX , Humanos , Masculino , U.R.S.S.RESUMO
Peculiarities of training of military medical staff during the Great Patriotic War. Extreme conditions of the World War II required as soon as possible rebuilding the work of institutions for higher medical education concerning training of military medical personnel. During the war significantly changed the organization of educational process in the S.M.Kirov Military Medical Academy, the military-medical faculties and civilian medical institutions. During the war from military medical academies and military medical faculties annually graduated up to 1450 military and naval doctors, civil universities of the country prepared and sent to the front more than 65 thousand doctors. It called up from reserve 80 thousand doctors. Basically staffing problems have been resolved.
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Educação Médica , Pessoal de Saúde , Medicina Militar , Militares , II Guerra Mundial , Educação Médica/história , Educação Médica/organização & administração , Educação Médica/normas , Feminino , Pessoal de Saúde/educação , Pessoal de Saúde/história , História do Século XX , Humanos , Masculino , Medicina Militar/educação , Medicina Militar/história , Medicina Militar/métodos , Medicina Militar/organização & administração , Militares/educação , Militares/históriaRESUMO
INTRODUCTION: Professor Konstantinos Logothetopoulos is considered one of the founders of modern Gynaecology in Greece. MATERIAL AND METHODS: The establishment of new hospitals and medical institutes in Greece, the invention of the Logo-pack and organization of the first radiotherapy centre in Greece confirm his title as a distinguished medical doctor. However, he collaborated with the Nazi occupiers during the Second World War and for this reason he is considered a traitor as his decision to become Prime Minister overshadows the image of the distinguished professor and cancels all his contribution to Greek gynaecology. CONCLUSION: The aim of this article is to illustrate truths and facts of the life of a prominent doctor and to prove how his political decisions damaged irreversibly his career.
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Ginecologia/história , Política , Grécia , História do Século XIX , História do Século XX , Humanos , Masculino , Médicos , II Guerra MundialRESUMO
A history of Ronald Gain's dental practice is described including his service during the Second World War. An account is given of the bomb damage in and around the practice in Peckham Rye.
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Odontólogos/história , II Guerra Mundial , História do Século XX , Humanos , Londres , Odontologia Militar/históriaRESUMO
Born in 1922, Jean-François Salomon--originating from Erstein (Bas-Rhin)--and Paul-Antoine Joanny--originating from Besse-en-Chandesse (Puy-de-Dôme)--begin together their higher education at the "full exercise school of pharmacy" of the University of Clermont-Ferrand (where the University of Strasbourg found refuge from 1940 to 1945). They met again for their officinal initiation training period at the same pharmacist, Mr. Robin, who helped them join the Resistance fighters. They entered thus the movement "Combat". After the war, they kept close family ties--since J.-F. Salomon married in 1949 Yvette Lucienne Joanny, precisely P.-A. Joanny's sister--as well as a shared geographical attachment, in as far as both of them set up as pharmacists in the Auvergne. J.-F. Salomon fulfilled even heavy responsabilities for the National pharmaceutical association in his region of adoption, whereas P.-A. Joanny annexed to his own pharmacy two herbalist's shops without holder.
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História da Farmácia , Farmacêuticos/história , França , História do Século XX , Humanos , II Guerra MundialRESUMO
This paper aims to reveal changes in the relief support of the Japanese Red Cross relief units dispatched to Burma during the Second World War, from the beginning of fighting in Burma to the Japanese withdrawal. Japanese Red Cross relief units began their relief support when Japan invaded Burma in February of 1942. Counterattacks by the British, Indian and Chinese armies from December 1942 caused an increase in the number of patients. There were also many cases of malnutrition and malaria due to the extreme shortage of medical supplies as a result of the Battle of Imphal, which began in March of 1944. Bomb raids became even more intense after the battle ended in July 1944, and patients were carried into bomb shelters and caves on a daily basis. Just prior to invasion by enemy troops, they were ordered to evacuate to neighboring Thailand. Nurses from the Wakayama group hid their identity as members of the Red Cross and evacuated, with 15 out of 23 dying or being reported missing in action.
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Enfermeiras e Enfermeiros , Cruz Vermelha , Socorro em Desastres , II Guerra Mundial , Humanos , Japão , MianmarRESUMO
The article is devoted to the first publication of reminiscences of former military physician Alexander Zhukov (1919-2014), concerning the everyday work of military physicians in the one of the most crucial periods of the Great Patriotic War-the Battle of Stalingrad, in which the author took part from the very first to the last day.
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Medicina Militar/história , Militares , Médicos , II Guerra Mundial , História do Século XX , Humanos , Retratos como AssuntoRESUMO
Sergey Bogomolov (1925-1999) is one of a few military paramedics awarded the title of Hero of the Soviet Union for his heroism in the fight against the Nazis during the Great Patriotic War. After graduating from the Kirov Military Medical Academy he worked as a surgeon and anaesthesiologist in the Burdenko Main Military Clinical Hospital.