
The Russian Museum of Military Medicine (Russian:Военно-медицинский музей Министерства обороны Российской Федерации) is situated in the center ofSaint Petersburg,Russia, in front ofVitebsky Rail Terminal.
The Museum was founded inMoscow,RSFSR, in 1942, before being moved to Leningrad (now Saint Petersburg) three years later.[1] Its initial creation was based on collections from several small specialized Russian museums. Today, the museum holds about 210,000 exhibits relating to the history of Russian and worldmilitary medicine.

Responding to inquiries from foreign governments, the museum located the documents of more than 100,000 people who were listed in their respective countries as missing in action.
Moreover, the history of medicine reveals an even more ominous trend, which is the tendency toward the progressive dehumanization of medicine itself. Two hundred years ago, during theFrench-Russian wars, military doctors impartially treated both their own soldiers and the soldiers of the enemy. The Russian military doctor, Christophor Oppel, was awarded for his service on the battlefield by both the EmperorsAlexander I of Russia andNapoleon I of France at the same time! Now, 200 years later, at the beginning of the 21st century, military doctors participate in interrogation of the enemy with the intention of securing critical information with the aid of medicines. Furthermore, there exist some attempts to scientifically substantiate it, contending that the interests of the nation and government are superior to the interest of an individual (see e.g.[2]).
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