Nazi epidemic jaundice experiments/Related Articles
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- See also changes related to Nazi epidemic jaundice experiments, or pages that link to Nazi epidemic jaundice experiments or to this page or whose text contains "Nazi epidemic jaundice experiments".
Parent topics
- Nazi medical experiments [r]: Part of Holocaust was a program of nonconsensual medical experiments, primarily conducted at concentration camps, for which many of those conducted them were tried for war crimes [e]
- Infectious jaundice [r]: Obsolete name for what is probably hepatitis A [e]
- Hepatitis A [r]: A viral inflammation of the liver, transmissible through fecal contamination of food or water, caused by the hepatitis A virus [e]
Subtopics
Locations
- Sachsenhausen Concentration Camp [r]: Third Nazi concentration camp, established in 1936, collecting prisoners, at first primarily political, from the Berlin area; located near Oranienburg, north of Berlin [e]
- Natzweiler Concentration Camp [r]: A fairly small concentration camp, also called Struthof, near the town of Natzweiler, 55 kilomtres south of Strasbourg, France; had quarries and underground factories, and used for Nazi medical experiments. [e]
- Karl Mummenthey [r]: Chief of Office 1 (Minerals in the Reich) WVHA Amtsgruppe W, SS-Obersturmbannfuehrer; convicted in Pohl Case (NMT) [e]
- Nazi seawater experiments [r]: Nonconsensual Nazi medical experiments (July - September 1944), performed for the Luftwaffe and navy to test methods of making seawater drinkable; experiments were conducted at [Dachau Concentration Camp]] [e]
- Nazi typhus and other vaccine experiments [r]: Conducted for the benefit of the German armed forces to test the effectiveness of vaccines against typhus, smallpox, cholera, and other diseases at Buchenwald Concentration Camp and Natzweiler Concentration Camp (December 1941 - February 1945} [e]