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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.
Harefuah ; 162(4): 252-256, 2023 Apr.
Article in Hebrew | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37120747

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: This year marks the anniversary of the 80th year of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising (1943 -2023), a very important and significant turning point in the history of the Holocaust. The Uprising is not the only demonstration of courage and strength, in rebelling against the brutal Nazi oppressor: there was another form of intellectual and spiritual resistance in the ghetto - medical resistance. Physicians, nurses, and other healthcare professionals resisted. Not only did they provide very diverse and dedicated medical assistance to the ghetto residents, but they went beyond their professional duties in initiating research on Hunger Diseases and in founding a clandestine medical school. The medical work in the Warsaw Ghetto is a symbol of the victory of the human spirit.


Subject(s)
Holocaust , Medicine , Humans , History, 20th Century , Poverty Areas , Holocaust/history , National Socialism , Hunger , Jews/history
3.
Acta Paediatr ; 111(9): 1664-1669, 2022 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35202478

ABSTRACT

Coerced human experiments are among the most disturbing forms of ethical violations and criminality in medicine under National Socialism. Until 2016, there was no evidence-based analysis concerning numbers of victims and the type of experiments. A reference resource on Victims of Biomedical Research under NS. Collaborative Database of Medical Victims currently covers 28 655 victims who were subjected to 359 different experiments by the Nazis during World War Two. Drawing on this resource, this paper focuses on research on children. Finally, the narrow focus on the experiments, highlighting scientific methodology but disregarding the killing procedures of the Holocaust, is critically analysed.


Subject(s)
Biomedical Research , Holocaust , Child , Germany , History, 20th Century , Holocaust/history , Humans , Morals , National Socialism/history
4.
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
5.
Isr Med Assoc J ; 24(4): 207-209, 2022 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35415975

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Extermination via starvation was described in detail as an alternative or precursor to the final solution during the Holocaust in World War II. The main causes of death in the ghettos were exhaustion, environmental conditions (inadequate protection in extreme climates), infectious diseases, or starvation. In previous studies on the Lodz Ghetto, the causes of death via typhus exantematicus, tuberculosis, and heart failure were investigated [1,2]. In this article, we introduce the topic of diabetes in the presence of starvation and assess the incidence of malignancies in the years 1941-1944. The findings from the Lodz Ghetto would retroactively support the Warburg theory.


Subject(s)
Diabetes Mellitus , Genocide , Holocaust , Neoplasms , Starvation , Diabetes Mellitus/epidemiology , Holocaust/history , Humans , Jews/history , Neoplasms/epidemiology , Poverty Areas
7.
Med Humanit ; 46(2): 107-114, 2020 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32321786

ABSTRACT

This article asks what the reasons are for the frequent linking of the image of the Holocaust with that of dementia in contemporary discursive and representational practice. In doing so, it analyses some of the numerous 21st-century examples of fiction, drama and film in which the figure of a Holocaust survivor living with dementia takes centre stage. It explores the contradictory cultural effects that arise from making such a connection, in contexts that include expressions of fear at the spectacle of dementia, as well as comparisons between the person living with that condition and the inmate of a concentration camp. Detailed consideration of novels by Jillian Cantor and Harriet Scott Chessman as well as a play by Michel Wallenstein and a film by Josh Appignanesi suggests that the fictions of this kind can appear to provide solace for the impending loss of the eyewitness generation, yet also offer potential for a model for caregiving practice to those living with dementia in broader terms.


Subject(s)
Dementia/psychology , Holocaust/psychology , Literature/history , Prisoners/psychology , Survivors/psychology , Dementia/history , History, 20th Century , Holocaust/history , Humans , Prisoners/history , Survivors/history
8.
J Lesbian Stud ; 23(1): 52-67, 2019.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30714496

ABSTRACT

A Czech Holocaust survivor rescued by a Kindertransport in 1939; a long-lost Torah scroll, rediscovered in 1964, from a Jewish community wiped out in World War II; a German American lesbian who converted to Judaism in 2001. Three disparate stories, unfolding decades apart, converge in one memorable encounter, a Kristallnacht commemoration in Los Angeles organized by Beth Chayim Chadashim (BCC), the world's first LGBTQ synagogue, which leads to an enduring friendship and fresh insight into contemporary queer Jewish life. In this personal essay, longtime BCC member Sylvia Sukop interweaves history and autobiography to explore the beauty and power of ritual, the resonance of the "Choose life" passage in Deuteronomy that her congregation reads from its rescued Czech scroll every Yom Kippur, and the many forms that good deeds and survival can take. Progressive faith communities, the author suggests, and the traditions in which they are rooted make space to witness and affirm the fullness of one another's humanity, bridging differences and fostering unexpected kinship in a brutally divisive world.


Subject(s)
Holocaust/history , Homosexuality, Female/history , Jews/history , Sexual and Gender Minorities/history , Survivors/history , Czechoslovakia , Female , History, 20th Century , Homosexuality, Female/psychology , Humans , Jews/psychology , Sexual and Gender Minorities/psychology , Survivors/psychology
9.
Am J Public Health ; 108(1): 47-52, 2018 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29161059

ABSTRACT

Three Hippocratic physicians played critical roles in the prosecution of 23 Nazi doctors charged with murder and torture for conducting lethal medical experiments on concentration camp prisoners. Two of the physicians, Leopold Alexander and Andrew C. Ivy, were Americans, and the other, Werner Leibbrandt, was German. At the 70th anniversary of the Doctors' Trial it is fitting to recall the three's influences and contributions to the formulation of strict research ethics rules, known as the Nuremberg Code. Their contributions help us better understand why they insisted on strict research rules and yet ultimately were unable to apply these rules to their own research. Exploring their contributions at Nuremberg may help us appreciate the continuing difficulty physician-researchers have with accepting public regulation of research.


Subject(s)
Ethics, Research/history , Human Experimentation/ethics , Human Experimentation/history , Physicians/ethics , Physicians/history , Ethics, Medical/history , Germany , Hippocratic Oath , History, 20th Century , Holocaust/ethics , Holocaust/history , Humans , National Socialism/history , Physician's Role/history , Prisoners , United States
10.
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
13.
Epidemiol Mikrobiol Imunol ; 66(1): 8-14, 2017.
Article in Cs | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28374593

ABSTRACT

The article is a historical review study which deals with the epidemiological situation in the Terezin Jewish Ghetto, including the possibilities for laboratory diagnosis and remembrance of important medical personalities. Valid primary data (monographs, memoirs, archival collections, photographs, and daily orders) were retrieved based on source criticism to be processed using a document content analysis approach. In conclusion, the findings are briefly compared with the respective data from the Warsaw and Lodz ghettos.


Subject(s)
Communicable Diseases , Holocaust , Jews , Poverty Areas , Communicable Diseases/diagnosis , Communicable Diseases/epidemiology , Communicable Diseases/history , History, 20th Century , Holocaust/history , Humans , Jews/history , Jews/statistics & numerical data , Poland/epidemiology
14.
Wien Med Wochenschr ; 167(Suppl 1): 54-55, 2017 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28577075

ABSTRACT

The Holocaust is commonly known as the genocide perpetrated by the Nazi regime which killed six million European Jews. Not many people know, however, that another holocaust took place at the same time: the holocaust of the disabled. As Hitler pursued a strategic vision of a dominant, pure Aryan race, any inferior and weak human being was exterminated. A brief consideration is called for in order to not forget the horrifying events that took place at the beginning of the last century and in order to re-shape our concept of normality.


Subject(s)
Disabled Persons/history , Eugenics/history , Genocide/history , Holocaust/history , National Socialism/history , Germany , History, 20th Century , Humans
15.
Ceska Slov Farm ; 66(1): 35-45, 2017.
Article in Cs | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28569516

ABSTRACT

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.


Subject(s)
Holocaust/history , Jews/history , Pharmacists/history , Czech Republic , History, 20th Century , Humans , World War II
17.
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
18.
Can Bull Med Hist ; 33(2): 418-446, 2016.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28155423

ABSTRACT

Issues relating to the euthanasia killings of the mentally ill, the medical research conducted on collected body parts, and the clinical investigations on living victims under National Socialism are among the best-known abuses in medical history. But to date, there have been no statistics compiled regarding the extent and number of the victims and perpetrators, or regarding their identities in terms of age, nationality, and gender. "Victims of Unethical Human Experiments and Coerced Research under National Socialism," a research project based at Oxford Brookes University, has established an evidence-based documentation of the overall numbers of victims and perpetrators through specific record linkages of the evidence from the period of National Socialism, as well as from post-WWII trials and other records. This article examines the level and extent of these unethical medical procedures as they relate to the field of neuroscience. It presents statistical information regarding the victims, as well as detailing the involvement of the perpetrators and Nazi physicians with respect to their post-war activities and subsequent court trials.


Subject(s)
Holocaust , Human Experimentation , Neurosciences/history , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Child , Child, Preschool , Euthanasia , Female , History, 20th Century , Holocaust/history , Holocaust/statistics & numerical data , Human Experimentation/ethics , Human Experimentation/history , Human Experimentation/legislation & jurisprudence , Human Experimentation/statistics & numerical data , Humans , Infant , Infant, Newborn , Male , Middle Aged , National Socialism , Research Personnel/history , Research Personnel/statistics & numerical data , Young Adult
19.
Am J Public Health ; 105(2): 293-301, 2015 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25521892

ABSTRACT

We describe the system of public health that evolved in the Vilna Ghetto as an illustrative example of Jewish innovation and achievement during the Holocaust. Furthermore, we argue that by cultivating a sophisticated system of public health, the ghetto inmates enacted a powerful form of Jewish resistance, directly thwarting the intention of the Nazis to eliminate the inhabitants by starvation, epidemic, and exposure. In doing so, we aim to highlight applicable lessons for the broader public health literature. We hope that this unique story may gain its rightful place in the history of public health as an insightful case study of creative and progressive solutions to universal health problems in one of the most challenging environments imaginable.


Subject(s)
Holocaust/history , Jews/history , Public Health/history , Child , Child Welfare/history , Communicable Disease Control/history , History, 20th Century , Humans , Lithuania , National Socialism/history , Sanitation/history
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