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Otto Fleming When I was a student in Vienna in the 1930s great
emphasis was laid on medical ethics. Our first lectures were in the
anatomical institute where the inscription above the professor's
lectern read in large letters: Primum non nocere (firstly, do no harm).
Among other advice we were told never to admit to patients that they
had a fatal illness, still less that they were about to die. It was
assumed that they could not take such information, that they would be
driven to despair and their remaining time would be a constant torment
once any hope for recovery was extinguished. Even when patients asked
whether they were about to die, we had to deny it.
During the clinical part of my course I attended the lectures of
Professor Hans Eppinger. He was the head of the first medical clinic in
the Allgemeines Krankenhaus, the university hospital. He was a
brilliant man, well known not only as a clinician and a researcher, but
also for his dry and impersonal attitude. One day he brought a patient
into the lecture theatre and introduced him to the students with the
following words which I still remember after 60 years: "Nephritis can
be compared with a tragedy in five acts and" I had not thought about Eppinger for decades until I came across his
name twice recently. Looking through the list of unclaimed secret Swiss
bank accounts which was published a few months ago I saw the name of
Hans Eppinger. Why had he not claimed his money more than 50 years
after the end of the war? The answer became obvious from the other
publication.1 During the Nuremberg trials Eppinger was
brought to court for conducting "medical experiments" on Jewish
prisoners in the Dachau concentration camp and committed suicide.
References
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pointing to the
patient
"this is the final act of the tragedy." The patient broke
down in tears and was obviously distressed throughout the
demonstration. We were all shocked by Eppinger's brutal and unfeeling
manner and talked about it among ourselves for some time afterwards.
© BMJ 1998