The Holocaust as a critical point in the development of medical and research ethics Stacy Gallin
T
he Holocaust is a unique event, both in the history of genocide and in the history of professional ethics. As an incidence of mass murder, the Holocaust is the only example of medically sanctioned genocide, with extermination
of an entire race of people framed as an issue of public health and implementa-
tion of the state’s ethnic cleansing program overseen by the medical community through the systematic labeling, persecution, forced sterilization, and eventual killing of those deemed “unfit” or racially inferior. In the history of medical professional ethics, the Holocaust serves as a critical point where ethical standards in medicine and research went from being a priority internal to the medical profession to one that became subject to the oversight of society at large. This is not to say that before the Holocaust the medical profession was completely autonomous
About the author: Stacy Gallin, D.M.H., is the Founder and Director of the Maimonides Institute for Medicine, Ethics and the Holocaust (www.mimeh.org), as well as the Director of the Center for Human Dignity in Bioethics, Health, and the Holocaust at Misericordia University. She is the Co‑Chair of the Department of Bioethics and the Holocaust and Faculty of the Department of Education of the UNESCO Chair of Bioethics (Haifa).
This presentation is an edited and abbreviated version of “Holocaust as an Inflection Point in the Development of Bioethics and Research Ethics,” co‑authored by Stacy Gallin and Ira Bedzow, and published in the Handbook of Research Ethics and Scientific Integrity, edited by Ron Iphofen (March 2019).