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Dr Robert Jay Lifton |
THE NAZI DOCTORS:
Medical
Killing and
the Psychology
of Genocide © |
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67 |
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Euthanasia: Direct Medical
Killing |
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[seventeen-] day period, Pfannmüller was required to
complete 2,109 such evaluations. And once more they did no examinations, had no
access to medical histories, and made their decision solely on the basis of the
questionnaire. Their occasional disagreements had only to do with definitions
and policy principles, and the pressure was always toward death. One expert
remembered the general principle that in doubtful or borderline cases ...
action should be requested, and recalled that official injunctions
exceeded the ... medically defensible standpoint. Another expert
recalled the similar principle that one should not be petty ... but
instead, liberal in the sense of a positive [killing] judgment.48
These same experts served at times on special Physicians
Commissions, which had the ostensible purpose of providing further medical
control but tended to be a medical cover for pressing ahead with the legal
machinery of the project, especially where there had been any suggestion of
recalcitrance or resistance or even pleas of insufficient time and personnel
for the paperwork.
For example, there was the case of the
Neuendettelsauer Nursing Homes in Bavaria, a scattered group of institutions
asked to fill out fifteen hundred forms in four weeks. After the denial of a
request for a delay to permit the chief doctor of the hospital to return from a
trip, the commission appeared on less than a days notice; it consisted of
one expert and sixteen young men and women, about half of whom were medical
students and the other half typists. The medical students filled in the forms,
making use of material from the files to dig out damning information, even when
no longer applicable, and working entirely independently of the institutional
doctors. These students sometimes questioned nurses about patients in a
perfunctory way, ignoring answers that conveyed favorable information and
sometimes reversing in their report what was actually told them by the nurses.
When it was pointed out to the commissioner (the expert) that the
students had assumed that all cases of mental impairment were equally severe
because all were listed in the files as idiocy (according to an
earlier terminology), he agreed to take account of the fact in the future
but several hundred questionnaires had already been filled out in
accordance with the students misconception. It is estimated that during
the week the commission members spent at the hospital, they brought about the
death of more than a thousand patients.49
The marked questionnaires were then sent for a final review by a
senior expert (Obergutachter), a function served at first
only by Heyde but later by Nitsche and possibly Linden as well. At this level,
there was no ?; nor was this ultimate expert bound in any way by
the earlier judgments. While this signature was pro forma, it carried with it
the full authority not only of the project but usually of German academic
psychiatry as well, since the signatory tended to be a distinguished professor.
As far as is known, no formal written guidelines were provided for either level
of these expert reviews. 50
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THE NAZI DOCTORS:
Medical Killing and the Psychology of
Genocide Robert J. Lifton ISBN 0-465-09094 ©
1986 |
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Page 67 |
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