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      Neurosciences in the Third Reich: from Ivory Tower to death camps.

      The Canadian Journal of Neurological Sciences. Le Journal Canadien Des Sciences Neurologiques
      Concentration Camps, history, Euthanasia, Germany, History, 20th Century, Human Experimentation, Humans, Jews, Neurosciences, Sterilization, Reproductive, War

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          Abstract

          It is commonly thought that the horrific medical abuses occurring during the era of the Third Reich were limited to fringe physicians acting in extreme locales such as the concentration camps. However, it is becoming increasingly apparent that there was a widespread perversion of medical practice and science that extended to mainstream academic physicians. Scientific thought, specifically the theories of racial hygiene, and the political conditions of a totalitarian dictatorship, acted symbiotically to devalue the intrinsic worth to society of those individuals with mental and physical disabilities. This devaluation served to foster the medical abuses which occurred. Neurosciences in the Third Reich serves as a backdrop to highlight what was the slippery slope of medical practice during that era. Points on this slippery slope included the "dejudification" of medicine, unethical experimentation in university clinics, systematic attempts to sterilize and euthanasize targeted populations, the academic use of specimens obtained through such programs and the experimental atrocities within the camps.

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