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      • SS physician Josef Mengele conducted inhumane, and often deadly, medical experiments on prisoners at Auschwitz. He became the most notorious of the Nazi doctors who conducted experiments at the camp. Mengele was nicknamed the "angel of death." He is often remembered for his presence on the selection ramps at Auschwitz.
      encyclopedia.ushmm.org/content/en/article/josef-mengele
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  2. George Libman Engel (December 10, 1913 – November 26, 1999) was an American psychiatrist and internist who, along with his colleague John Romano, was instrumental in developing and teaching psychosomatic medicine at the University of Rochester Medical Center in Rochester, New York.

  3. In the work of the physician, Dr Engel proposed disciplined study of those bonds to enrich personal connections, to promote understanding of patient and illness and to sustain the physician through emotionally and intellectually meaningful work.

    • Peter A Engel, Anna G Engel
    • 2002
  4. Nov 1, 2005 · George Engel’s own story, his biopsychosocial profile, highlights the influence of his family—especially his uncle and distinguished biomedical stalwart, Emanuel Libman, and his identical twin, Frank, also a physician, whose death in 1963 imposed a deeply personal sense of loss and self-awareness . Dr.

  5. George Engel’s own story, his biopsychosocial profile, high-lights the influence of his family—especially his uncle and distin-guished biomedical stalwart, Emanuel Libman, and his identical twin, Frank, also a physician, whose death in 1963 imposed a deeply personal sense of loss and self-awareness (4). Dr.

  6. Nov 1, 2015 · Engel’s interest in psychiatry led him to undergo psychoanalytic training, which he completed in 1955, but he did not have a psychiatric residency. His focus remained on trying to understand how psychologic phenomena could influence physiology.

    • Suzanne R. Karl, Jimmie C.B. Holland
    • 2015
  7. Nov 8, 2021 · The term “biopsychosocial” was arguably first coined by Roy Grinker in 1952. Spurred on by his interest in systems theory, Engel expanded upon the model in 1977 and used it to hypothesise about the integration of mind and body. Despite its shortcomings, the BPS model remains relevant and useful.

  8. Presents an obituary for George Engel, the father of the biopsychosocial medical model. Engel was a brilliant physician, scientist, teacher, and humanist, a pioneer who brought us a biopsychosocial model that developed from the same general systems theory roots as family systems theory.

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