TY - JOUR PY - 2011// TI - From small beginnings: The euthanasia of children with disabilities in Nazi Germany JO - Journal of Paediatrics and Child Health A1 - Hudson, Lee SP - 508 EP - 511 VL - 47 IS - 8 N2 -
Although they are the lesser known Nazi atrocities, it is estimated that some 5000-8000 children with physical and intellectual disabilities were killed in Nazi Germany under a programme of euthanasia. Chronologically, they were a precedent, being the Nazis' first organised and systematic killing programme that would later enlarge to include adults with disabilities and ultimately, to the broader programme of racially motivated 'euthanasia' of the holocaust. The programme intimately involved medical staff, including a number of paediatricians, many of whom would go unpunished and continue to practice for many years after the war. This paper outlines the origins and development of the programme, examines how families were involved and affected and looks at what motivated the medical staff involved with the killing. The history of the Nazi child euthanasia programme has a number of important lessons for practicing doctors and health policy‐makers in the 21st century.
LA - SN - 1034-4810 UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1440-1754.2010.01977.x ID - ref1 ER -