Human Subjects Research after the Holocaust

While it is comforting to believe that Nazi physicians, nurses, and bioscientists were either incompetent, mad, or few in number, they were, in fact, the best in the world at the time, and the vast majority participated in the government program of “applied biology.” They were not coerced to behave...

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Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: Rubenfeld, Sheldon (Editor), Benedict, Susan (Editor)
Format: eBook
Language:English
Published: Cham Springer International Publishing 2014, 2014
Edition:1st ed. 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:
Collection: Springer eBooks 2005- - Collection details see MPG.ReNa
Table of Contents:
  • Preface
  • Acknowledgments
  • Foreword
  • 1. Introduction: How Did It Go So Wrong?
  • 2. Twin Experiments at Auschwitz: A First-Person Account
  • 3. Eugenics and Racial Hygiene: Applied Research Strategies before, during, and after National Socialism
  • 4. Medical Ethics and Medical Research on Human Beings in National Socialism
  • 5. Sulfonamide Experiments on Prisoners in Nazi Concentration Camps: Coherent Scientific Rationality Combined with Complete Disregard of Humanity
  • 6. Stages of Transgression: Anatomical Research in National Socialism
  • 7. Nurses and Human Subjects Research during the Third Reich and Now
  • 8. Involuntary Abortion and Coercive Research on Pregnant Forced Laborers in National Socialism
  • 9. Abusive Medical Practices on “Euthanasia” Victims in Austria during and after World War II
  • 10. Medical Research and National Socialist Euthanasia: Carl Schneider and the Heidelberg Research Children 1942 until 1945
  • 11. Victims of Human Experiments and Coercive Research under National Socialism: Gender and Racial Aspects
  • 12. The White Rose: Resisting National Socialism
  • 13. The Origins and Impact of the Nuremberg Doctors’ Trial
  • 14. In the Shadow of Nuremberg: Unlearned Lessons from the Medical Trial
  • 15. The Ethics of Medical Experiments: Have We Learned the Lessons of Tuskegee and the Holocaust?
  • 16. Human Subjects Research during and after the Holocaust: Typhus Vaccine Development and the Legacy of Gerhard Rose
  • 17. Ethics in Space Medicine: Holocaust Beginnings, the Present, and the Future
  • 18. Reproduction Then and Now: Learning from the Past
  • 19. Promoting Clinical Research and Avoiding Bad Medicine: A Clinical Research Curriculum
  • 20. The Psychophysiology of Attribution: Why Appreciative Respect Can Keep us Safe
  • 21. Confronting Medicine during the Nazi Period: Autobiographical Reflections
  • 22. Teaching the Holocaust to Medical Students: A Reflection on Pedagogy and Medical Ethics
  • 23. No Exceptions, No Excuses: ATestimonial
  • Index