TB Research

In the Shadow of ‘Euthanasia’: The Long Road to the Nazi Murder of Tuberculosis Patients

Patrick Bernhard

German History · 2020-12

Abstract

Abstract The social stigmatization, persecution and murder of tuberculosis patients in Nazi Germany is a topic that has long been overshadowed by euthanasia crimes. Based on extensive archival research, this article shows that over 30,000 patients, labelled as deviant, became victims of forced detention. In so-called ‘special institutions’, which were part of the regime’s terror apparatus, these people suffered severe physical abuse. An estimated 4,000 were deliberately starved to death or murdered by overdoses of medication. As the article argues, a long road led to the Nazi murder of tuberculosis patients and began with medical experience gathered during the First World War and in the 1920s. When the regime’s handling of the disease and of tuberculosis patients is located within this much wider time frame, the notion that the exigencies of the Second World War caused the regime’s radicalization falters.

MeSH terms

  • Nazism
  • Shadow (psychology)
  • Persecution
  • Criminology
  • Tuberculosis
  • Radicalization
  • World War II
  • Psychiatry
  • Law
  • Political science
  • Medicine
  • History
  • Psychology