Light D W, Liebfried S, Tennstedt F
Am J Public Health. 1986 Jan;76(1):78-83. doi: 10.2105/ajph.76.1.78.
This article describes the efforts by German workers' groups and pioneering social physicians to design health care services oriented to prevention and cost-effective treatment. Jews played a key role in developing these prototypes of today's health maintenance organizations (HMOs) and preferred provider organizations (PPOs). The growing success of these services threatened private practitioners in a number of ways. They formed a trade union and took militant action. Stage by stage, the profession asserted its dominance, culminating in an alliance with the National Socialists and Hitler to take over these services and to purge them of socialist and Jewish physicians. Medical societies assisted Hitler in his policies of "purification," and the health care delivery systems shifted from being local, patient-centered, and health-oriented to being national, physician-centered, and focused on curing illness. After World War II, these changes were not reversed as part of denazification, and 40 years later, social medicine has yet to recover.
本文描述了德国工人团体和开创性的社会医生为设计以预防和成本效益高的治疗为导向的医疗服务所做的努力。犹太人在发展当今健康维护组织(HMO)和优先提供者组织(PPO)的这些原型中发挥了关键作用。这些服务日益成功,在许多方面对私人执业医生构成了威胁。他们成立了工会并采取了激进行动。该行业逐步确立了其主导地位,最终与纳粹党和希特勒结盟,接管这些服务,并清除其中的社会主义和犹太医生。医学协会协助希特勒实施“净化”政策,医疗服务提供系统从地方化、以患者为中心和以健康为导向转变为国家化、以医生为中心和专注于疾病治疗。第二次世界大战后,这些变化并未作为去纳粹化的一部分得到扭转,40年后,社会医学仍未恢复。