When the entire country is under Nazi rule, it is very easy. Outside countries had to intervene to stop the experiments and the Nazi party.
Women were killed and the Nazis raped them so they could use there babies for medical experiments
The motives for most were to purify the human race, and get better information about Germany's soldiers to improve their armor. One doctor who was being tried in court for his criminal activities with experiments requested that the U.S. court continue and help him with the experiments. He told them that it was vital to saving humanity.
badly, most were killed right away or they were used in medical experiments
They were intreged witht the human body.
The Nazis committed numerous crimes against the Jewish and other people that stood in their way. The Jewish people were imprisoned in concentration camps, starved to death, forced to work, separated from their families, put to death by gas, and had medical experiments performed upon them.
Very poorly, even Nazis thought this. <><><> Their property was stolen or destroyed, they were treated worse thananimals, starved, had medical experiments performed on them, subjected to extreme cruelty and degradation, and murdered by the millions.
Auschwitz had Joseph Mengele. Dachau performed High Altitude Medical Experiments and Buchenwald tested pharmaceuticals and incendiary devices on prisoners. See the Jewish Virtual Library's section on Medical Experiments for a good list of experiments and those responsible.
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Yes, during World War II, in Nazi Germany, unethical medical experiments were conducted on various groups, including German women. These experiments often involved forced sterilizations aimed at promoting the regime's eugenics policies. Many women were subjected to these procedures without consent, reflecting the broader human rights violations perpetrated by the Nazis. Such actions are now recognized as severe violations of medical ethics and human rights.
By moving them to concentration camps, hidden from public view. They were shot, suffocated with poison gas, or killed in medical experiments (along with plain old starvation, exposure to bad weather, disease, and overwork)
Most experiments conducted are medical experiments, but fluid mechanics experiments, various experiments involving weightlessness, and testing of new technologies are also conducted.
because they could. concentration camps offered unlimited access to unlimited numbers of subjects. while considered barbaric, most experiments were done to determine how long a human would survive under extremely adverse circumstances with a majority being done for the German air force. other experiments were conducted to see how a disease progresses or how different toxins affect the body and length of life.