After World War II ended in 1945 and women doctors were no longer banned from having contracts with the national health insurance system if their husbands were wage earners, Albrecht helped to reestablish the Hamburg Medical Board and served as a director on the board until 1963.
Here, she started working in a lab and attending classes at the University Surgical Center in August 1914, just as World War I was beginning.
[1] After getting married and having two children, Albrecht had to leave her practice in Berlin and moved to Hamburg, where she began volunteering in the internal medicine and dermatology wards at a local hospital.
When the Nazi period began, however, Albrecht was forbidden to have a contract with the national health insurance system because her husband also had a job.
[1] When the Second World War ended in 1945, Albrecht helped to re-establish the Hamburg Medical Board and became a director, a title she held until 1963.