 |
|

Search "Nazi human experimentation"
|

|
Nazi human experimentation | |
|
About 13 pages (3,811 words) in 2 products |
|

Encyclopedia and Summary Information
summary from source:

Nazi Medicine Summary
1,654 words, approx. 6 pages Medical research and practice under Germany's National Socialist regime (1933–1945) has come to serve as an archetype for the immoral uses to which science and technology can be applied. In many instances appeals to science were used to...
summary from source:

Nazi human experimentation Information
2,157 words, approx. 7 pages
 Early Nazi Timeline Hitler's rise to power Nazi Germany Night of the Long KnivesNuremberg Rallies Kristallnacht The Holocaust Nuremberg Trials Ex-Nazis and...



summary from source:
 Environmental Health Perspectives
A rule gone awry?(Human Experimentation)
06/01/2006: 2,047 words, approx. 7 pages The U.S. EPA's new Protections for Subjects in Human Research rule, which came into force on 7 April 2006, was born of a need to tighten the ethical guidelines controlling nonmedical human experimentation. The rule was ostensibly designed to offer people greater protection...
summary from source:
 The Journal of Nutrition
The experimental induction of vitamin A deficiency in humans
07/01/2002: 5,945 words, approx. 20 pages ABSTRACT This is an historical account of experiments that were undertaken to determine the daily amount of vitamin A or carotene (or both) required for health of humans, by deliberately (and in one case accidentally) causing them to become vitamin A deficient. The recommended...


|
Nazi human experimentation | |
|
About 13 pages (3,811 words) in 2 products |
|
|
|


|
|  |
 |
|  |