Literature DB >> 28389680

[Attempting a Great Integration : Paul Martini and the First Post-War Conference of the German Society for Internal Medicine].

Ralf Forsbach1, Hans-Georg Hofer2.   

Abstract

The long established German Society for Internal Medicine (DGIM) profoundly incriminated itself through its actions and positions during the National Socialist era. The German clinical physician Paul Martini assumed the part of reorganizing the DGIM prior to its first post-war convention in 1948 in Karlsruhe. Martini, who himself had opposed the Nazi regime, adopted a course of comprehensive integration. He strived to incorporate both physicians who had been persecuted by the Nazi Regime as well as former moderate National Socialists into the DGIM. At the same time he campaigned to preserve the pan-German nature of the conferences and aimed rapidly to make the DGIM re-compatible with international research. However, this path led to an allegedly apolitical focus on science and decades of largely failing to confront its Nazi past.

Keywords:  Contemporary history of medicine; Internal medicine; National Socialism; Occupation period; Paul Martini; Post-war era

Mesh:

Year:  2017        PMID: 28389680     DOI: 10.1007/s00048-017-0166-7

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  NTM        ISSN: 0036-6978


  2 in total

1.  [Is there a German history of evidence-based medicine? Methodic standards of therapeutic research in the early 20th century and Paul Martini's "Methodology of therapeutic investigation" (1932)].

Authors:  S Stoll; V Roelcke; H Raspe
Journal:  Dtsch Med Wochenschr       Date:  2005-07-29       Impact factor: 0.628

2.  [Biography as discipline tradition. The idealization of the pharmacologist Wolfgang Heubner (1877-1957)].

Authors:  Nils Kessel
Journal:  Med Ges Gesch       Date:  2008
  2 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.