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עמוד בית
Wed, 04.02.26

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January 2026
Gideon Eshel MD, Eran Kozer MD

Background: After the Nazi regime seized power, the only place where Jewish medical students were allowed to conduct their practicum in Germany were the Jewish hospitals.

Objectives: To identify the Jewish students who, during summer 1933 and later, conducted their practicum and wrote their medical dissertations in the Jewish hospitals, and to identify their tutors.

Methods: We examined the dissertations at the medical faculty of Berlin that were conducted from the summer of 1933 until the autumn 1937, identifying the students who did their practicum at Jewish hospitals and stood for the MD examination.

Results: In total, 29 Jewish students finished their medical practicum and wrote their dissertations either in the Jewish hospitals of Berlin or in other Jewish hospitals outside the capital city after April 1933. Only five of those studies were presented to the MD examination signed by their Jewish tutors. The remaining 24 works were submitted and signed by an Aryan professor. In 10 of those last studies, the names of the Jewish tutors could be uncovered.

Conclusions: The Jewish hospitals of Berlin continued their academic activity even after being ejected from Berlin hospital's medical faculty body in April 1933. At that time most of the studies dealt with surgery and gynecology. In most cases the studies were submitted for the MD examination by proxy and signed by an Aryan professor.

March 2007
R.D. Strous and M.C. Edelman

Eponyms are titles of medical disorders named for individuals who originally described the condition. They also help us remember and identify the disorder. Medicine is replete with them, and changing them or eradicating them, for whatever reason, is not simple. But when there is a moral issue involved – for example, the research conducted under overwhelming unethical conditions – we believe it wrong to perpetuate and thus “reward” the memory of the individual for whom the disorder is named. The name of a syndrome should thus be discontinued if described by an individual whose research used extreme or who was involved in atrocities against humanity. Ethical considerations should be introduced into medical nosology just as they exist in patient care and research. This article details a group of notable eponyms, the names of which are associated with overt crimes of the medical community during the Nazi era, and provides alternative medical nomenclature. In addition, examples are provided of eponyms named after Nazi era victims, eponyms of those who protested such injustices, and eponyms of those who had to flee discrimination and death. These should be remembered and even strengthened, as opposed to those of the perpetrators, which should be obliterated. Since the greatest accolade a physician can earn is praise from his colleagues as expressed in an eponym entrenched in one's name, the medical profession should remove any honor given to physicians involved in crimes to humanity.

 
 

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