The declining use of medical eponyms associated with the Nazi regime: A case study of changes in the International Classification of Diseases of the World Health Organization

Wioleta Karwacka
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

This work focuses on a specific type of terminological variants, i.e. medical eponymous terms gradually replaced by alternative, noneponymous terms. This descriptive study is conducted on a controlled medical terminology set – the International Classification of Diseases (ICD) of the World Health Organization (WHO). The focus of the study is on the eponymous terms named after physicians associated with the Nazi regime. The aim is to analyse if these eponyms were included in ICD-10 and if they were transferred into the new, 11th version of the Classification. Of all the eponymous terms presented in the paper, seven were found in ICD-10. The overall result of this study indicates that the eponymous terms associated with the Nazi regime have been replaced with alternatives or removed from the 11th version of the International Classification of Diseases in all cases, except for Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease.
减少使用与纳粹政权有关的医学名词:世界卫生组织《国际疾病分类》变化的个案研究
这项工作侧重于一种特定类型的术语变体,即医学同名术语逐渐被替代的非同名术语所取代。这项描述性研究是在一个受控的医学术语集——世界卫生组织(WHO)的国际疾病分类(ICD)上进行的。这项研究的重点是与纳粹政权有关的医生命名的同名术语。目的是分析这些名称是否被列入ICD-10,以及它们是否被转移到新的第11版分类中。在论文中提出的所有同名术语中,有7个在ICD-10中找到。这项研究的总体结果表明,除克雅氏病外,在所有情况下,与纳粹政权有关的同名术语已被替代或从《国际疾病分类》第11版中删除。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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