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A. Well, I heard about this series of experiments only by
looking at the document here. I hadn't seen or heard of it before.
Q. In the last entry of his diary, Ding says: "By order of the Chief
Hygienist of the Waffen SS, dated the 12th of August 1944, it was to be
established whether the course of a typhus illness can be mitigated by a typhus
vaccine through intravenous or intramuscular injections." Did you ever
issue such an order?
A. No. I repeatedly pointed out that on the basis of the entire organizational
set-up of the Medical Institute of the Waffen SS, neither as the Chief of the
Hygiene Institute of the Waffen SS, nor as the consulting hygienist of the
Reich Physician SS and Police, could I order any experiments to be carried out
on inmates because I had just as little influence on the medical service of the
concentration camp as any other member of the Waffen SS. The matter with which
we dealt was completely different. In the Crimea, in one of the hospitals in
the East, I saw that the internist there was treating typhoid illnesses with
injections of dead typhoid vaccines; and this procedure resulted in fever in
many of the cases. At that time I remembered that literature dating back to the
last World War, when a number of papers were written on the very same subject,
showed that there were similar methods in the treatment of typhus and typhoid
entailing the injection of vaccines.
During the course of these years when I had to deal closely with typhus, I had
developed a very definite opinion about the origin and development of typhus. I
was, therefore, of the opinion that in the case of this illness, which
clinically is very close to para-typhus, it would be quite feasible to make an
experiment with that kind of treatment. The clinical symptoms of typhus and
typhoid and stomach typhus are very similar. If a cure can be achieved with one
method, it is to be assumed that all other types of illnesses of that nature
could also be treated with success using that method. After my return,
therefore, I established contact with a number of internes belonging to the
hospitals which I knew, and wrote them that I had gathered like experiences. I
quoted passages from literature on that subject, and I said that our new
experiences were the same as our old. I made the suggestion that the same
method be used in the case of typhus by injecting with a protective typhus
vaccine. One might consider that at that time we had just as little means of
combating the severe disease as we have today. We, therefore, were medically
justified in searching for new methods of treatment.
Q. Were these to be a series of experiments in the sense in which Ding carried
them out?
A. That is completely out of the question. There was no reason to do that at
all. In order to perform such an experiment, one could
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