Jewish and female doctors were not allowed to practice medicine in Germany during Hitler’s rule from 1933 to 1945. Data about the consequences of this on the health service are difficult to come by, but what information can be gathered demonstrates a detrimental effect on the nation’s health. These data, however, must be interpreted with consideration to the morbidity and mortality from violence, death camps, slave labor, and the privations of war. The article summarizes the history of German health care during this period and also compares Germany to other nations at that time
Medical historians have characterized the nazi regime as a ‘biocracy’: major social and political is...
International audienceThis article examines how the women's health movement emerged in West Germany....
When the war was over in 1945, Germany was a country with no government, little functioning infrastr...
AbstractJewish and female doctors were not allowed to practice medicine in Germany during Hitler’s r...
Until the early twentieth century Germany was the most advanced country in Europe, scientifically an...
National Socialism caused pervasive ideological shifts in all areas of German culture and education,...
When the war was over in 1945, Germany was a country with no government, little functioning infrastr...
[Extract] In 1993, Adolf Hitler came to power in Germany bringing with him the beliefs, policie and ...
This paper seeks to answer the question of whether or not doctors in Nazi Germany were forced to com...
Introduction: The infamy of Nazi medical research conjures up images of horrific experiments in the ...
This article reviews newly declassified US intelligence files and other sources, including relevant ...
I t is no exaggeration to declare that the greatest blot on the record of medicine in the 20th centu...
• Misguided by the notion that the decline of the German race would be prevented by purifying "...
Illness was a defining experience for prisoners of Nazi concentration camps and ghettos, and yet the...
"This article compares the responses to the declining birthrate by three very different regimes in W...
Medical historians have characterized the nazi regime as a ‘biocracy’: major social and political is...
International audienceThis article examines how the women's health movement emerged in West Germany....
When the war was over in 1945, Germany was a country with no government, little functioning infrastr...
AbstractJewish and female doctors were not allowed to practice medicine in Germany during Hitler’s r...
Until the early twentieth century Germany was the most advanced country in Europe, scientifically an...
National Socialism caused pervasive ideological shifts in all areas of German culture and education,...
When the war was over in 1945, Germany was a country with no government, little functioning infrastr...
[Extract] In 1993, Adolf Hitler came to power in Germany bringing with him the beliefs, policie and ...
This paper seeks to answer the question of whether or not doctors in Nazi Germany were forced to com...
Introduction: The infamy of Nazi medical research conjures up images of horrific experiments in the ...
This article reviews newly declassified US intelligence files and other sources, including relevant ...
I t is no exaggeration to declare that the greatest blot on the record of medicine in the 20th centu...
• Misguided by the notion that the decline of the German race would be prevented by purifying "...
Illness was a defining experience for prisoners of Nazi concentration camps and ghettos, and yet the...
"This article compares the responses to the declining birthrate by three very different regimes in W...
Medical historians have characterized the nazi regime as a ‘biocracy’: major social and political is...
International audienceThis article examines how the women's health movement emerged in West Germany....
When the war was over in 1945, Germany was a country with no government, little functioning infrastr...