Medical Experiments During The Holocaust

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During the Holocaust, the Nazis committed numerous atrocities, including unsanctioned and unethical medical experiments at Dachau, one of the concentration camps.
Franz Blaha had studied medicine in Prague, Vienna, Strasburg and Paris and received his diploma in 1920. From 1920 to 1926 He was a clinical assistant and in 1926, he became chief physician of the Iglau Hospital in Moravia, Czechoslovakia. Then he held this position until 1939 when the Germans entered Czechoslovakia, later being seized as a hostage and held a prisoner for co-operating with the Czech Government. They sent him as a prisoner to the Dachau Concentration Camp in April 1941, and he remained there until the liberation of the camp in April 1945 .

The experiments preformed on these human victims were involuntary and unjustifiable. They did several experiments concerning different types of diseases found in humans. The victims have to consent to mosquito bites and injections which were forcefully put down upon them. Examples of such diseases are Malaria experiments on about 1200 people were conducted by Dr. Klaus Schilling between 1941 and 1945. Different kinds of treatment were applied, including quinine, pyrifer, neosalvarsan, antipyrin, pyramidon and a drug called 2516 Behring. Thirty to forty of these patients died due to Malaria itself.
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Sigismund Rascher to determine the effects of changing air pressure. As many as twenty-five people were put at one time into a specially constructed van in which pressure could be increased or decreased as required. The purpose was to find out the effects of high altitude and of rapid parachute descents on human beings. Franz Blaha vividly elaborates what he had seen and what he was instructed to