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Carola B. Eisenberg

Carola Blitzman Eisenberg (September 15, 1917 – March 11, 2021) was an Argentine-American psychiatrist who became the first woman to hold the position of Dean of Students at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. From 1978 to 1990, she was the dean of student affairs at Harvard Medical School (HMS). She was a long-time lecturer in the Department of Global Health and Social Medicine at HMS (formerly the Department of Social Medicine). She was also both a founding member of Physicians for Human Rights and an honorary psychiatrist with the Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston. After retiring, she was involved in human rights work through Physicians for Human Rights, the Institute for Healthcare Improvement, and elsewhere. She turned 100 in September 2017[1] and died in Lincoln, Massachusetts, in March 2021 at the age of 103.[2]

Carola B. Eisenberg
Born
Carola Blitzman

(1917-09-15)September 15, 1917
Argentina
DiedMarch 11, 2021(2021-03-11) (aged 103)
NationalityArgentine
CitizenshipU.S. (naturalized 1949)
Occupation(s)Psychiatrist, child psychiatrist, medical educator
Known forPhysicians for Human Rights
Spouse(s)Manfred Guttmacher (deceased)
Leon Eisenberg (deceased)
ChildrenAlan Edward Guttmacher
Laurence Guttmacher

Life and career edit

Eisenberg was a native Argentine and the daughter of Teodora (née Kahan) and Bernardo Blitzman (Jewish emigrants from Ukraine and Russia, respectively).[3] She was a co-founder of Physicians for Human Rights and latterly its vice president and chair of its Asylum Committee. Her dissertation, "A Histological Study of Tay–Sachs disease," was presented in 1944 for her medical degree at the University of Buenos Aires in Argentina. She was also a 1935 graduate of the School of Psychiatric Social Work in Hospicio De Las Mercedes (Hospice of the Virgin of Mercy) in [4][5] Argentina. After receiving her medical degree and completing her psychiatric training at the Hospicio De Las Mercedes, she emigrated to the United States and became fellow in child psychiatry at the Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore, Maryland.

She was licensed to practice psychiatry in Maryland (1955) and Massachusetts (1971). Eisenberg served on the faculty of the Johns Hopkins Medical School from 1958 to 1967 before becoming a staff psychiatrist at the Student Health Service of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). From 1972 to 1978, she served as Dean of Students at MIT—first woman to occupy that position and the first to serve on the Academic Council, its highest academic governing authority. In 1978, after leaving MIT, she was appointed Dean for Student Affairs at Harvard Medical School, where she served until 1990. From 1990 to 1992, she was the director of the International Programs for Medical Students of the school.

Throughout her career, she consulted with the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO) (1979); Swarthmore College (1984); the Mental Health Division of the World Health Organization (1985); the Committee on Human Rights and Medical Practice of the American College of Physicians (1989–1993); the National Institutes of Health (1992, 1995–1998); Office of the Surgeon General, Department of Health and Human Services (1992); and the National Research Council of the National Academy of Sciences and National Academy of Engineering (1992–1996).

She was a member of human rights missions to El Salvador, Chile, and Paraguay. She founded and served as Vice President of Physicians for Human Rights USA–headquartered in Cambridge, Massachusetts–and as President of the Examiners Club of Boston.[6] She served on the Committee on Women in Science and Engineering of the National Research Council of the National Academy of Sciences, and was a member of the advisory committee to the Office of Research on Women's Health of the National Institutes of Health.

Eisenberg was active in both the Cambridge-based Institute for Healthcare Improvement[7] and the Oral History Project of the Foundation for the History of Women in Medicine.[8]

She was the widow of Leon Eisenberg, the Presley Professor of Social Medicine and professor of psychiatry emeritus in the Department of Global Health and Social Medicine of Harvard Medical School.[9] As the widow of Manfred Guttmacher (brother of Alan Frank Guttmacher), she was also the mother of Laurence Guttmacher,[10] a clinical professor of psychiatry and medical humanities at the University of Rochester School of Medicine, and Alan Guttmacher,[11] who succeeded Francis Sellers Collins (a past Director of the National Institutes of Health) as Acting Director of the National Human Genome Research Institute at the National Institutes of Health. From 1 December 2009, she was Acting Director,[12] then Director,[13] of the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development.

Timeline of life and achievements edit

  • Born: Buenos Aires, Argentina
  • Naturalized U.S. Citizen
  • Johns Hopkins Hospital, Psychiatrist, Outpatient Department, July 1947 – June 1950
  • Dept. of Education, City of Baltimore, Consultant in Psychiatry, July 1951 – June 1953
  • University of Maryland, Instructor in Psychiatry, July 1955 – June 1959
  • Park School of Baltimore, Consultant in Psychiatry, Baltimore, July 1957 – June 1967
  • Johns Hopkins Medical School
    • Instructor in Psychiatry and Pediatrics, July 1958 – June 1966
    • Assistant Professor of Psychiatry and Pediatrics, July 1966 – October 1967
  • Sheppard Pratt Hospital, Consultant in Psychiatry, July 1960 – August 1967
  • Private Practice of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Baltimore, July 1955 – August 1967
  • Massachusetts Institute of Technology
    • Staff Psychiatrist, 1968 – June 1972
    • Dean for Student Affairs, July 1972 – June 1978
  • , July 1968–?
  • McLean Hospital, Consultant in Psychiatry, July 1969 – June 1992
  • Harvard Medical School, 1968–?
    • Lecturer in Psychiatry, July 1968 – June 1996
    • Lecturer in Social Medicine, July 1996 – 2008
    • Dean for Student Affairs, July 1978 – June 1990
    • Director, International Programs for Medical Students, July 1990 – June 1992
  • Private Practice of Psychiatry, Boston, 1992–2006
  • Through PHR, Co-recipient of Nobel Peace Prize for PHR's International Campaign to Ban Landmines, 1997
  • Lifetime Achievement Award, Massachusetts Psychiatric Society, 2005
  • Human Rights Award, American Psychiatric Association (APA), 2005
  • George Eastman Award, University of Rochester, 2009
  • Distinguished Lifetime Service Award, American Psychiatric Association, 2009.

Prizes and awards edit

Other honors edit

  • .
  • "Profiles of Remarkable Women" included in New dimensions in women's health By Linda Lewis Alexander, Judith H. Larosa, Helaine Bader, Susan Garfield.
  • On April 28, 2010, Dr. Carola Eisenberg presented the first annual Leon Eisenberg Award for the Program in Mental Health and Developmental Disabilities (MH/DD), Children's Hospital Boston. She was a Guest of Honor each year at the annual Eisenberg Award presentation dinner, held at the MIT Faculty Club in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
  • On October 10, 2010, , Harvard Faculty Club, Cambridge, MA. Sponsored by , of which she was a Founding Member.
  • Dr. Carola Eisenberg has been an Honorary Psychiatrist with the Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH), for a very long time. (start date uncertain)

Boards edit

  • American Psychiatric Association (Life Fellow): Council on Emerging Issues, 1974–79; Committee on International Abuse of Psychiatry and Psychiatrists, 1991–94; Committee on Human Rights, 1994; vice chair, Council on International Affairs, 1995–98
  • American Orthopsychiatric Association (Life Fellow); program committee, 1967–70
  • Foundation for the History of Women in Medicine, board of directors, dates?
  • Center for the History of Medicine, Harvard Medical School, Women's History Committee, dates?
  • : Vice President, 1990–1999; chair, Asylum Network, 2000–?

Other affiliations edit

Bibliography edit

  • Eisenberg, C. Similarities and Differences Between Men and Women as Students. J. Amer. Med. Women's Assoc. 1981:35–36, 48–50.
  • Eisenberg, C. Honduras: Mental Health Awareness Changes a Community. World Health Forum, I (1,2):72–77, 1980.
  • Eisenberg, C. Caring. Harvard Medical Alumni Bulletin, Vol. 55:16–17, 48–49, 1981 (summer).
  • Eisenberg, C. Women as Physicians. Journal of Medical Education, Vol. 58, 534–541, July 1983.
  • Eisenberg, C; Halperin, D; Hargreaves, A; Hubbard, F; Mittleberger, J; Palmisano, J; Stanbury, J (1983). "Health and human rights in El Salvador". The New England Journal of Medicine. 308 (17): 1028–9. doi:10.1056/NEJM198304283081713. PMID 6835310.
  • Eisenberg, C. Mental Health and the College Student. Mental Health and the Schools, S. Leung (ed.) Vancouver, University of British Columbia Press, 1985.
  • Eisenberg, C., Foreword to a Student-to-Student Guide to Medical School by R.W. Betcher, M.D. Little, Brown and Co., Boston 1985.
  • Eisenberg, C (1986). "It is still a privilege to be a doctor". The New England Journal of Medicine. 314 (17): 1113–4. doi:10.1056/NEJM198604243141710. PMID 3960083. Reprinted in: The Advisor, 6:18-19, 1986. Reprinted in: On Doctoring: Stories, Poems, Essays. Edited by R. Reynolds and J. Stone. Simon and Schuster, N.Y., 1991; 2nd Edition 1996, 3rd Edition 2002.
  • Eisenberg, C. The Stresses of Beginning Teaching. Journal of the Harvard-Danforth Center, 2:17, 1987 (January)
  • Geiger, J; Eisenberg, C; Gloyd, S; Quiroga, J; Schlenker, T; Scrimshaw, N; Devin, J (1989). "A new medical mission to El Salvador". The New England Journal of Medicine. 321 (16): 1136–40. doi:10.1056/NEJM198910193211629. PMID 2797078.
  • Eisenberg, C (1989). "Medicine is no longer a man's profession. Or, when the men's club goes coed it's time to change the regs". The New England Journal of Medicine. 321 (22): 1542–4. doi:10.1056/NEJM198911303212210. PMID 2811973.
  • Eisenberg, C. Matters of Faith: Students Follow Their Own Course. Harvard Medical Alumni Bulletin, 63:20-23,1990.
  • Eisenberg, C (1991). "Affirmative action for women and promotion of academic excellence". Academic Medicine. 66 (11): 678–9. doi:10.1097/00001888-199111000-00008. PMID 1747176.
  • Eisenberg, C. Confidentiality in Psychotherapy: The case of Anne Sexton. (Letters to the Editor) New England Journal of Medicine, 325(20):1451, 1991.
  • Introductory Remarks June 11, 1992 Pooks Hill Marriott Hotel Bethesda, Maryland, reprinted in Journal of Women's Health. 1992 (Fall);1(3):235–237.
  • "Landmines: A Deadly Legacy" in Landmines by Arms Project (Human Rights Watch), Physicians for Human Rights (U.S.) – co-author
  • Health and Public Policy Committee by the Human Rights and Medical Practice Subcommittee (including Carola Eisenberg) (1995) The Role of the Physician and the Medical Profession in the Prevention of International Torture and in the Treatment of Its Survivors. Annals of Internal Medicine 15 April 1995;122(8):607–613.
  • Eisenberg, C. (1995) The Struggle To Get There, In: Women in Biomedical Careers: Dynamics of Change: Strategies for the 21st Century. Full report of the workshop. Washington, National Institute of Health. Office for Research on Women's Health. NIH publication, No.95-3565; 18–21.
  • Eisenberg, C. (1996). "Review of A New Prescription for Women's Health by Bernadine Healy". New England Journal of Medicine. 335: 1614–15. doi:10.1056/nejm199611213352119.
  • Eisenberg, C. (1996) ? , 1996;3:1.
  • Eisenberg, C. Mental Health of People and the Effects of War on Children. One World, One Language: Paving the Way to Better Perspectives for Mental Health. Edited by JJ Lopez-Ibor, F. Lieh-Mak, HM Visotsky and M. Maj. Hogrefe & Huber Publishers, Seattle, 1999, pp. 88–93.
  • Eisenberg, C. (1999) Medicine and Human Rights. XI World Congress of Psychiatry Hamburg, Germany.
  • Meeting the Nation's Needs for Biomedical and Behavioral Scientists: Committee on National Needs for Biomedical and Behavioral Research Personnel (1994)
  • Institute of Medicine (IOM)
  • Hannibal K, Eisenberg C, Heggenhougen HK (2004) Integrating Human Rights into Medical Education.
  • Eisenberg, C. (2004) Giving Women a Break when Few Men Did. In Jerry Wiesner: Scientist, Statesman, Humanist: Memories and Memoirs by Jerome Bert Wiesner, Walter A. Rosenblith, Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press ISBN 9780262182324 OCLC 52134711
  • Open Letter from US Medical Leaders to 2004 Presidential Candidates (2004):
  • Eisenberg, C. (2007) Women have improved the quality of medicine: a capsule history. In DeAngelis C (Editor), Women and Medicine: A Macy Foundation Conference. New York City: Josiah Macy, Jr. Foundation, pages 37–40.
  • Eisenberg, C. (1999) Keynote Address – “Without Struggle There is No Progress” – at NIH-sponsored conference, "Achieving XXcellence in Health" – Advancing Women's Contributions to Science through Professional Societies. [1], cosponsored by National Institutes of Health in conjunction with National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS), and The American Society for Cell Biology, Washington, D.C., December 1999. pp. 21–23.

Presentations at professional meetings edit

  • "Juvenile Delinquency"—United Nations Conference on the Prevention of Delinquency, Tokyo, Japan, 1963
  • "Psychiatric Disturbances in Adolescence"—Argentinian Congress of Child Psychiatry, Buenos Aires, Argentina, 1969
  • "Psychiatric Services for College Students"—Aghia Sophia Children's Hospital, Athens, Greece, 1969
  • "Sexual Problems in Adolescence"—Ciba Foundation Conference, University of Newcastle upon Tyne, England, 1971
  • "Pediatric Psychiatry"—Tufts University Postgraduate Course, St. Maartens, 1971
  • "Epidemiology of Adolescent Psychiatric Disorder"—Venezuelan Congress of Psychiatry, Mérida, 1975
  • "Sexual Development"—Los Angeles County Pediatric Society, Palm Springs, California, 1975
  • "Student Health"—Presentation to Venezuelan Ministry of Health, Caracas, 1976
  • "Dual Career Marriages"—Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut, 1977 (April)
  • "The Adjustment to College"—American Academy of Pediatrics, New York City, 1977 (November)
  • "College Life"—Presentations to Massachusetts Institute of Technology Alumni Clubs, Mexico, London, Paris, 1980
  • "Psychotherapy"—CIBA Foundation Conference, Glasgow University Medical School, 1978
  • "Reproductive Freedom: The Responsibility of the Medical Profession"—Annual Meeting of the *Planned Parenthood Federation of America, Inc., San Diego, California, 1978
  • "Mental Health in Honduras: The Community Approach"—World Health Forum, Tegulcigalpa, Honduras, 1979
  • "Similarities and Differences Between Men and Women as Students"—Elizabeth Garrett Symposium at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, 1979
  • "Medical Student Life"—Presentation to Harvard Surgical Alumni Group—Chicago, Illinois, 1979
  • "The Response to Trauma"—CIBA Foundation Conference, Sheffield Medical School, UK, March 1980
  • Commencement Address, Harvard Medical School, June 1981
  • "Clinical Research Career for Women"—Chairwoman, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland, 1984
  • "Primary Health Care"—CIBA Foundation Conference, Nottingham Medical School, United Kingdom, November, 1984
  • "A Career in Medicine: Is It Still Worth It?"—A.O.A. Lecture, Case Western Reserve University, April 1986
  • Commencement Speech—Albert Einstein College of Medicine, May 1987
  • "Medicine and Dental Medicine as Vocations of Service to Others"—Convocation, The University of Connecticut School of Medicine, August, 1987
  • Commencement Speech—University of Vermont College of Medicine, May, 1988
  • "College Mental Health"—Massachusetts General Hospital, Postgraduate Course, April 1989
  • "The Pleasures of Medicine"—invited address, University of Rochester, March, 1990
  • Symposium on Women in Medicine—invited address, University of North Carolina School of Medicine, Chapel Hill, April, 1991
  • Participant, Women's Leadership Conference, Radcliffe College, Summer, 1991
  • Co-Chair, NIH Conference: "Women in Biomedical Careers" 11 June 1992
  • Plenary Speaker, Conference on Women in Math, Science and Engineering,
  • A.A.A.S. and Women's College Coalition, 14 November 1992
  • Keynote Speaker, 75th Anniversary of the Admission of Women
  • Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, 8 October 1993
  • Grand Rounds, Department of Pediatrics, University of Vermont: Physicians and Human Rights, 12 April 1995
  • Plenary Address, Society for Behavioral Science and Medical Education, Naples, Florida, 7 October 1995
  • Plenary Address, Conference on Women in Medicine, University of Rochester, 26 April 1996
  • Keynote Speaker, White Coat Ceremony, New Jersey College of Medicine, Newark, 22 August 1996
  • Keynote Speaker, White Coat Ceremony, College of Physicians and Surgeons, Columbia University, New York City, 23 August 1996
  • Plenary Speaker, Children and War, World Congress of Psychiatry, Madrid, 28 August 1996
  • Grand Rounds, Cambridge Hospital, 18 September 1996
  • Leadership Conference, Radcliffe College, 14 December 1996
  • Visiting Lecturer, University of Cape Town, South Africa, 17–28 March 1997: Human Rights and Health, War and Children, Women and Medicine
  • Women's Leadership Project, Radcliffe College, September 1997, September 1998: Sessions on: careers; race and gender; leadership roles
  • Speaker: The Effects of War on Children, XI International Congress of Pediatrics, The Netherlands, August 1998
  • Physicians and Women's Rights, Center for Psychological Health, Radcliffe
  • Grand Rounds Psychiatry, Strong Memorial Hospital, University of Rochester, February 1999
  • Keynote Speaker: "Without Struggle, There Is No Progress", Achieving XXcellence in Science, cosponsored by National Institutes of Health in conjunction with National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS), and The American Society for Cell Biology, Washington, D.C., December 1999. pp. 21–23.
  • Radcliffe Intellectual Renewal Conference: Protecting Human Rights: Whose Job Is It? Endicott Peabody Conference Center, June 15, 2001
  • Macy Conference on Psychiatry. Toronto, Canada. October 2001
  • Jonathan Mann Lecture, University of New Mexico School of Mexico, December 2001
  • Human Rights and the Physician, University of Rochester School of Medicine, April 2002
  • Rights and Responsibilities of Physicians, Bioethics Panel, 2004 Conference on International Health, MIT Hippocratic Society, Cambridge, MA, April 24–25, 2004.
  • Commencement Address, University of Rochester School of Medicine, May 15, 2004.

Other professional and academic lectures edit

  • Women's Rights are the Key to Human Rights, 1999, CWPH Networking Breakfasts & Conferences, Center for Women's Professional Health. Lexington, MA

Human rights missions (with PHR) edit

  • El Salvador,
  • Chile, July–August 1986
  • Paraguay, May 1988
  • El Salvador, June 1989

References edit

  1. ^ Staff (2017-10-22). "Langlands turns 100". Dawn. Retrieved 2017-11-01.
  2. ^ Carola Eisenberg Dies at 103; Helped Start Physicians for Human Rights
  3. ^ Who's Who of American Women 2004-2005. Marquis Whos Who. June 2004. ISBN 9780837904306.
  4. ^ Men's Hospital of the Virgin of Mercy
  5. ^ The limits of psychiatric reform in Argentina, 1890–1946 pp. 226–247
  6. ^ "Literary Clubs in the US".
  7. ^ "Home". ihi.org.
  8. ^ . www.fhwim.org. Archived from the original on 26 July 2011. Retrieved 12 January 2022.
  9. ^ . ghsm.hms.harvard.edu. Archived from the original on 17 February 2012. Retrieved 12 January 2022.
  10. ^ "Laurence B. Guttmacher, M.D. - University of Rochester Medical Center".
  11. ^ "Alan Edward Guttmacher, M.D."
  12. ^ . www.nichd.nih.gov. Archived from the original on 27 May 2010. Retrieved 12 January 2022.
  13. ^ . Archived from the original on 2011-06-27.

External links edit

  • Carola Eisenberg Dies at 103; Helped Start Physicians for Human Rights - New York Times Obituary
  • Dr. Carola Eeisenberg, human rights group founder, groundbreaking woman, dean at MIT and Harvard dies at 103 - Boston Globe obituary
  • Physicians for Human Rights
  • GoogleBooks: "It Is Still a Privilege to be a Doctor" in _On Doctoring_.
  • of BostonAchieving XXcellence in Science: *Role of Professional Societies in Advancing Women in Science: Proceedings of a Workshop, AXXS 2002 (2004)
  • at the Countway Medical Library of
  • Carola Eisenberg Archives at MIT, where she had been Dean of Students (1972–1978) before leaving to become HMS Dean of Students
  • Carola Eisenberg's family.
  • Harvard Catalyst Profile 2011-07-19 at the Wayback Machine
  • Carola Eisenberg papers, 1945-2006 (inclusive), 1977-2006 (bulk), H MS c254. Harvard Medical Library, Francis A. Countway Library of Medicine, Boston, Mass.
  • Leon Eisenberg papers, 1905-2009 (inclusive), 1968-2005 (bulk). H MS c196. Harvard Medical Library, Francis A. Countway Library of Medicine, Boston, Mass.
  • Manfred S. Guttmacher Papers, 1928-1964 (inclusive). H MS c205. Harvard Medical Library, Francis A. Countway Library of Medicine, Boston, Mass.
  • Alan F. Guttmacher papers, 1860, 1898-1974. H MS c 155. Harvard Medical Library, Francis A. Countway Library of Medicine, Boston, Mass.

carola, eisenberg, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citatio. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations March 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message This biographical article is written like a resume Please help improve it by revising it to be neutral and encyclopedic October 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Carola Blitzman Eisenberg September 15 1917 March 11 2021 was an Argentine American psychiatrist who became the first woman to hold the position of Dean of Students at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology From 1978 to 1990 she was the dean of student affairs at Harvard Medical School HMS She was a long time lecturer in the Department of Global Health and Social Medicine at HMS formerly the Department of Social Medicine She was also both a founding member of Physicians for Human Rights and an honorary psychiatrist with the Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston After retiring she was involved in human rights work through Physicians for Human Rights the Institute for Healthcare Improvement and elsewhere She turned 100 in September 2017 1 and died in Lincoln Massachusetts in March 2021 at the age of 103 2 Carola B EisenbergBornCarola Blitzman 1917 09 15 September 15 1917ArgentinaDiedMarch 11 2021 2021 03 11 aged 103 Lincoln Massachusetts U S NationalityArgentineCitizenshipU S naturalized 1949 Occupation s Psychiatrist child psychiatrist medical educatorKnown forPhysicians for Human RightsSpouse s Manfred Guttmacher deceased Leon Eisenberg deceased ChildrenAlan Edward GuttmacherLaurence Guttmacher Contents 1 Life and career 2 Timeline of life and achievements 3 Prizes and awards 4 Other honors 5 Boards 6 Other affiliations 7 Bibliography 8 Presentations at professional meetings 9 Other professional and academic lectures 10 Human rights missions with PHR 11 References 12 External linksLife and career editEisenberg was a native Argentine and the daughter of Teodora nee Kahan and Bernardo Blitzman Jewish emigrants from Ukraine and Russia respectively 3 She was a co founder of Physicians for Human Rights and latterly its vice president and chair of its Asylum Committee Her dissertation A Histological Study of Tay Sachs disease was presented in 1944 for her medical degree at the University of Buenos Aires in Argentina She was also a 1935 graduate of the School of Psychiatric Social Work in Hospicio De Las Mercedes Hospice of the Virgin of Mercy in 4 5 Argentina After receiving her medical degree and completing her psychiatric training at the Hospicio De Las Mercedes she emigrated to the United States and became fellow in child psychiatry at the Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore Maryland She was licensed to practice psychiatry in Maryland 1955 and Massachusetts 1971 Eisenberg served on the faculty of the Johns Hopkins Medical School from 1958 to 1967 before becoming a staff psychiatrist at the Student Health Service of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology MIT From 1972 to 1978 she served as Dean of Students at MIT first woman to occupy that position and the first to serve on the Academic Council its highest academic governing authority In 1978 after leaving MIT she was appointed Dean for Student Affairs at Harvard Medical School where she served until 1990 From 1990 to 1992 she was the director of the International Programs for Medical Students of the school Throughout her career she consulted with the Pan American Health Organization PAHO 1979 Swarthmore College 1984 the Mental Health Division of the World Health Organization 1985 the Committee on Human Rights and Medical Practice of the American College of Physicians 1989 1993 the National Institutes of Health 1992 1995 1998 Office of the Surgeon General Department of Health and Human Services 1992 and the National Research Council of the National Academy of Sciences and National Academy of Engineering 1992 1996 She was a member of human rights missions to El Salvador Chile and Paraguay She founded and served as Vice President of Physicians for Human Rights USA headquartered in Cambridge Massachusetts and as President of the Examiners Club of Boston 6 She served on the Committee on Women in Science and Engineering of the National Research Council of the National Academy of Sciences and was a member of the advisory committee to the Office of Research on Women s Health of the National Institutes of Health Eisenberg was active in both the Cambridge based Institute for Healthcare Improvement 7 and the Oral History Project of the Foundation for the History of Women in Medicine 8 She was the widow of Leon Eisenberg the Presley Professor of Social Medicine and professor of psychiatry emeritus in the Department of Global Health and Social Medicine of Harvard Medical School 9 As the widow of Manfred Guttmacher brother of Alan Frank Guttmacher she was also the mother of Laurence Guttmacher 10 a clinical professor of psychiatry and medical humanities at the University of Rochester School of Medicine and Alan Guttmacher 11 who succeeded Francis Sellers Collins a past Director of the National Institutes of Health as Acting Director of the National Human Genome Research Institute at the National Institutes of Health From 1 December 2009 she was Acting Director 12 then Director 13 of the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development Timeline of life and achievements editBorn Buenos Aires Argentina Naturalized U S Citizen Johns Hopkins Hospital Psychiatrist Outpatient Department July 1947 June 1950 Dept of Education City of Baltimore Consultant in Psychiatry July 1951 June 1953 University of Maryland Instructor in Psychiatry July 1955 June 1959 Park School of Baltimore Consultant in Psychiatry Baltimore July 1957 June 1967 Johns Hopkins Medical School Instructor in Psychiatry and Pediatrics July 1958 June 1966 Assistant Professor of Psychiatry and Pediatrics July 1966 October 1967 Sheppard Pratt Hospital Consultant in Psychiatry July 1960 August 1967 Private Practice of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry Baltimore July 1955 August 1967 Massachusetts Institute of Technology Staff Psychiatrist 1968 June 1972 Dean for Student Affairs July 1972 June 1978 Massachusetts General Hospital Consultant in Psychiatry July 1968 McLean Hospital Consultant in Psychiatry July 1969 June 1992 Harvard Medical School 1968 Lecturer in Psychiatry July 1968 June 1996 Lecturer in Social Medicine July 1996 2008 Dean for Student Affairs July 1978 June 1990 Director International Programs for Medical Students July 1990 June 1992 Private Practice of Psychiatry Boston 1992 2006 Through PHR Co recipient of Nobel Peace Prize for PHR s International Campaign to Ban Landmines 1997 FHWIM Morani Renaissance Woman Award 2002 Lifetime Achievement Award Massachusetts Psychiatric Society 2005 Human Rights Award American Psychiatric Association APA 2005 George Eastman Award University of Rochester 2009 Distinguished Lifetime Service Award American Psychiatric Association 2009 Prizes and awards editPhysicians for Human Rights which she co founded was the 1997 co recipient with Jody Williams of the Nobel Peace Prize for its International Campaign to Ban Landmines Massachusetts Psychiatric Association 2000 Morani Renaissance Woman Award to honor an outstanding woman physician or scientist in North America Foundation for the History of Women in Medicine Drexel University College of Medicine 2002 Current List of Award Winners permanent dead link Lifetime Achievement Award Massachusetts Psychiatric Society 2005 APA Human Rights Award American Psychiatric Association 2005 Current List of Award Winners George Eastman Award University of Rochester UR s highest Award given annually most years 2009 Distinguished Lifetime Service Award for contributions in addressing mental health in college and medical students and for distinguished leadership as an international human rights advocate American Psychiatric Association San Francisco 2009 The Leon and Carola Eisenberg Award from Physicians for Human RightsOther honors editHMS Mention of the 25 000 Prize in honor of Dr Carola Eisenberg former HMS Dean of Students Profiles of Remarkable Women included in New dimensions in women s health By Linda Lewis Alexander Judith H Larosa Helaine Bader Susan Garfield On April 28 2010 Dr Carola Eisenberg presented the first annual Leon Eisenberg Award for the Program in Mental Health and Developmental Disabilities MH DD Children s Hospital Boston She was a Guest of Honor each year at the annual Eisenberg Award presentation dinner held at the MIT Faculty Club in Cambridge Massachusetts On October 10 2010 A Tribute to Dr Carola Eisenberg Founding Board Member Visionary Soul Harvard Faculty Club Cambridge MA Sponsored by Physicians for Human Rights of which she was a Founding Member Dr Carola Eisenberg has been an Honorary Psychiatrist with the Massachusetts General Hospital MGH for a very long time start date uncertain Boards editAmerican Psychiatric Association Life Fellow Council on Emerging Issues 1974 79 Committee on International Abuse of Psychiatry and Psychiatrists 1991 94 Committee on Human Rights 1994 vice chair Council on International Affairs 1995 98 American Orthopsychiatric Association Life Fellow program committee 1967 70 Foundation for the History of Women in Medicine board of directors dates Center for the History of Medicine Harvard Medical School Women s History Committee dates Physicians for Human Rights PHR where she was a Co founder not confounder Vice President 1990 1999 chair Asylum Network 2000 Other affiliations editDRCLAS the David Rockefeller Center for Latin American Studies American Psychiatric Association Life Fellow Council on Emerging Issues 1974 79 Committee on International Abuse of Psychiatry and Psychiatrists 1991 94 Committee on Human Rights 1994 vice chair Council on International Affairs 1995 98 American Orthopsychiatric Association Life Fellow Program Committee 1967 70 Association for Adolescent Psychiatry Association of American Medical Colleges Massachusetts Medical Society Fellow Massachusetts Psychiatric Society Inc Council Aesculapian Club of Harvard Medical School American Association of University Professors American Women s Medical Society American Association for the Advancement of Science American Association of University Women Association of Women in Science Inc Examiners Club Boston president 1992 2001 Massachusetts General Hospital MGH Honorary Psychiatrist 19 20 Institute for Healthcare Improvement IHI Cambridge MABibliography editEisenberg C Similarities and Differences Between Men and Women as Students J Amer Med Women s Assoc 1981 35 36 48 50 Eisenberg C Honduras Mental Health Awareness Changes a Community World Health Forum I 1 2 72 77 1980 Eisenberg C Caring Harvard Medical Alumni Bulletin Vol 55 16 17 48 49 1981 summer Eisenberg C Women as Physicians Journal of Medical Education Vol 58 534 541 July 1983 Eisenberg C Halperin D Hargreaves A Hubbard F Mittleberger J Palmisano J Stanbury J 1983 Health and human rights in El Salvador The New England Journal of Medicine 308 17 1028 9 doi 10 1056 NEJM198304283081713 PMID 6835310 Eisenberg C Mental Health and the College Student Mental Health and the Schools S Leung ed Vancouver University of British Columbia Press 1985 Eisenberg C Foreword to a Student to Student Guide to Medical School by R W Betcher M D Little Brown and Co Boston 1985 Eisenberg C 1986 It is still a privilege to be a doctor The New England Journal of Medicine 314 17 1113 4 doi 10 1056 NEJM198604243141710 PMID 3960083 Reprinted in The Advisor 6 18 19 1986 Reprinted in On Doctoring Stories Poems Essays Edited by R Reynolds and J Stone Simon and Schuster N Y 1991 2nd Edition 1996 3rd Edition 2002 Commentary on Eisenberg s lead place in volume Eisenberg C The Stresses of Beginning Teaching Journal of the Harvard Danforth Center 2 17 1987 January Geiger J Eisenberg C Gloyd S Quiroga J Schlenker T Scrimshaw N Devin J 1989 A new medical mission to El Salvador The New England Journal of Medicine 321 16 1136 40 doi 10 1056 NEJM198910193211629 PMID 2797078 Eisenberg C 1989 Medicine is no longer a man s profession Or when the men s club goes coed it s time to change the regs The New England Journal of Medicine 321 22 1542 4 doi 10 1056 NEJM198911303212210 PMID 2811973 Eisenberg C Matters of Faith Students Follow Their Own Course Harvard Medical Alumni Bulletin 63 20 23 1990 Eisenberg C 1991 Affirmative action for women and promotion of academic excellence Academic Medicine 66 11 678 9 doi 10 1097 00001888 199111000 00008 PMID 1747176 Eisenberg C Confidentiality in Psychotherapy The case of Anne Sexton Letters to the Editor New England Journal of Medicine 325 20 1451 1991 1 Women s Rights The Coming Tidal Wave NIH Conference on Women in Biomedical Careers Dynamics of Change Strategies for the 21st Century Introductory Remarks June 11 1992 Pooks Hill Marriott Hotel Bethesda Maryland reprinted in Journal of Women s Health 1992 Fall 1 3 235 237 Landmines A Deadly Legacy in Landmines by Arms Project Human Rights Watch Physicians for Human Rights U S co author Health and Public Policy Committee by the Human Rights and Medical Practice Subcommittee including Carola Eisenberg 1995 The Role of the Physician and the Medical Profession in the Prevention of International Torture and in the Treatment of Its Survivors Annals of Internal Medicine 15 April 1995 122 8 607 613 Eisenberg C 1995 The Struggle To Get There In Women in Biomedical Careers Dynamics of Change Strategies for the 21st Century Full report of the workshop Washington National Institute of Health Office for Research on Women s Health NIH publication No 95 3565 18 21 Eisenberg C 1996 Review of A New Prescription for Women s Health by Bernadine Healy New England Journal of Medicine 335 1614 15 doi 10 1056 nejm199611213352119 Eisenberg C 1996 Women doctors Where do we come from What are we Where are we going Annals of Behavioral Science and Medical Education 1996 3 1 Eisenberg C Mental Health of People and the Effects of War on Children One World One Language Paving the Way to Better Perspectives for Mental Health Edited by JJ Lopez Ibor F Lieh Mak HM Visotsky and M Maj Hogrefe amp Huber Publishers Seattle 1999 pp 88 93 Eisenberg C 1999 Medicine and Human Rights XI World Congress of Psychiatry Hamburg Germany Meeting the Nation s Needs for Biomedical and Behavioral Scientists Committee on National Needs for Biomedical and Behavioral Research Personnel 1994 Institute of Medicine IOM Hannibal K Eisenberg C Heggenhougen HK 2004 Integrating Human Rights into Medical Education Eisenberg C 2004 Giving Women a Break when Few Men Did In Jerry Wiesner Scientist Statesman Humanist Memories and Memoirs by Jerome Bert Wiesner Walter A Rosenblith Cambridge Mass MIT Press ISBN 9780262182324 OCLC 52134711 Open Letter from US Medical Leaders to 2004 Presidential Candidates 2004 Leading Health Professional Sign On Letter Regarding Antipersonnel Landmines to Presidential Candidates Eisenberg C 2007 Women have improved the quality of medicine a capsule history In DeAngelis C Editor Women and Medicine A Macy Foundation Conference New York City Josiah Macy Jr Foundation pages 37 40 Eisenberg C 1999 Keynote Address Without Struggle There is No Progress at NIH sponsored conference Achieving XXcellence in Health Advancing Women s Contributions to Science through Professional Societies 1 cosponsored by National Institutes of Health in conjunction with National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences NIEHS and The American Society for Cell Biology Washington D C December 1999 pp 21 23 Presentations at professional meetings edit Juvenile Delinquency United Nations Conference on the Prevention of Delinquency Tokyo Japan 1963 Psychiatric Disturbances in Adolescence Argentinian Congress of Child Psychiatry Buenos Aires Argentina 1969 Psychiatric Services for College Students Aghia Sophia Children s Hospital Athens Greece 1969 Sexual Problems in Adolescence Ciba Foundation Conference University of Newcastle upon Tyne England 1971 Pediatric Psychiatry Tufts University Postgraduate Course St Maartens 1971 Epidemiology of Adolescent Psychiatric Disorder Venezuelan Congress of Psychiatry Merida 1975 Sexual Development Los Angeles County Pediatric Society Palm Springs California 1975 Student Health Presentation to Venezuelan Ministry of Health Caracas 1976 Dual Career Marriages Yale University School of Medicine New Haven Connecticut 1977 April The Adjustment to College American Academy of Pediatrics New York City 1977 November College Life Presentations to Massachusetts Institute of Technology Alumni Clubs Mexico London Paris 1980 Psychotherapy CIBA Foundation Conference Glasgow University Medical School 1978 Reproductive Freedom The Responsibility of the Medical Profession Annual Meeting of the Planned Parenthood Federation of America Inc San Diego California 1978 Mental Health in Honduras The Community Approach World Health Forum Tegulcigalpa Honduras 1979 Similarities and Differences Between Men and Women as Students Elizabeth Garrett Symposium at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine 1979 Medical Student Life Presentation to Harvard Surgical Alumni Group Chicago Illinois 1979 The Response to Trauma CIBA Foundation Conference Sheffield Medical School UK March 1980 Commencement Address Harvard Medical School June 1981 Clinical Research Career for Women Chairwoman National Institutes of Health Bethesda Maryland 1984 Primary Health Care CIBA Foundation Conference Nottingham Medical School United Kingdom November 1984 A Career in Medicine Is It Still Worth It A O A Lecture Case Western Reserve University April 1986 Commencement Speech Albert Einstein College of Medicine May 1987 Medicine and Dental Medicine as Vocations of Service to Others Convocation The University of Connecticut School of Medicine August 1987 Commencement Speech University of Vermont College of Medicine May 1988 College Mental Health Massachusetts General Hospital Postgraduate Course April 1989 The Pleasures of Medicine invited address University of Rochester March 1990 Symposium on Women in Medicine invited address University of North Carolina School of Medicine Chapel Hill April 1991 Participant Women s Leadership Conference Radcliffe College Summer 1991 Co Chair NIH Conference Women in Biomedical Careers 11 June 1992 Plenary Speaker Conference on Women in Math Science and Engineering A A A S and Women s College Coalition 14 November 1992 Keynote Speaker 75th Anniversary of the Admission of Women Washington University School of Medicine St Louis 8 October 1993 Grand Rounds Department of Pediatrics University of Vermont Physicians and Human Rights 12 April 1995 Plenary Address Society for Behavioral Science and Medical Education Naples Florida 7 October 1995 Plenary Address Conference on Women in Medicine University of Rochester 26 April 1996 Keynote Speaker White Coat Ceremony New Jersey College of Medicine Newark 22 August 1996 Keynote Speaker White Coat Ceremony College of Physicians and Surgeons Columbia University New York City 23 August 1996 Plenary Speaker Children and War World Congress of Psychiatry Madrid 28 August 1996 Grand Rounds Cambridge Hospital 18 September 1996 Leadership Conference Radcliffe College 14 December 1996 Visiting Lecturer University of Cape Town South Africa 17 28 March 1997 Human Rights and Health War and Children Women and Medicine Women s Leadership Project Radcliffe College September 1997 September 1998 Sessions on careers race and gender leadership roles Speaker The Effects of War on Children XI International Congress of Pediatrics The Netherlands August 1998 Physicians and Women s Rights Center for Psychological Health Radcliffe Grand Rounds Psychiatry Strong Memorial Hospital University of Rochester February 1999 Keynote Speaker Without Struggle There Is No Progress Achieving XXcellence in Science cosponsored by National Institutes of Health in conjunction with National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences NIEHS and The American Society for Cell Biology Washington D C December 1999 pp 21 23 Radcliffe Intellectual Renewal Conference Protecting Human Rights Whose Job Is It Endicott Peabody Conference Center June 15 2001 Macy Conference on Psychiatry Toronto Canada October 2001 Jonathan Mann Lecture University of New Mexico School of Mexico December 2001 Human Rights and the Physician University of Rochester School of Medicine April 2002 Rights and Responsibilities of Physicians Bioethics Panel 2004 Conference on International Health MIT Hippocratic Society Cambridge MA April 24 25 2004 Commencement Address University of Rochester School of Medicine May 15 2004 Other professional and academic lectures editWomen s Rights are the Key to Human Rights 1999 CWPH Networking Breakfasts amp Conferences Center for Women s Professional Health Lexington MA Carola Eisenberg addresses Student PHR at Dartmouth College March 2008Human rights missions with PHR editEl Salvador January 1983 Chile July August 1986 Paraguay May 1988 El Salvador June 1989References edit Staff 2017 10 22 Langlands turns 100 Dawn Retrieved 2017 11 01 Carola Eisenberg Dies at 103 Helped Start Physicians for Human Rights Who s Who of American Women 2004 2005 Marquis Whos Who June 2004 ISBN 9780837904306 Men s Hospital of the Virgin of Mercy The limits of psychiatric reform in Argentina 1890 1946 pp 226 247 Literary Clubs in the US Home ihi org Foundation for the History of Women in Medicine FHWIM Oral History Project www fhwim org Archived from the original on 26 July 2011 Retrieved 12 January 2022 The Department of Global Health and Social Medicine ghsm hms harvard edu Archived from the original on 17 February 2012 Retrieved 12 January 2022 Laurence B Guttmacher M D University of Rochester Medical Center Alan Edward Guttmacher M D Alan Guttmacher Named Acting Director of NICHD www nichd nih gov Archived from the original on 27 May 2010 Retrieved 12 January 2022 NIH Enterprise Directory NED National Institutes of Health NIH Archived from the original on 2011 06 27 External links editCarola Eisenberg Dies at 103 Helped Start Physicians for Human Rights New York Times Obituary Dr Carola Eeisenberg human rights group founder groundbreaking woman dean at MIT and Harvard dies at 103 Boston Globe obituary Physicians for Human Rights Course Syllabi Medicine Human Rights and the Physician Carola Eisenberg amp Kris Heggenhougen Harvard Medical School Fall 1998 through Fall 2008 Syllabus itself GoogleBooks It Is Still a Privilege to be a Doctor in On Doctoring PHR Profile for Dr Carola Eisenberg Harvard Medical School of BostonAchieving XXcellence in Science Role of Professional Societies in Advancing Women in Science Proceedings of a Workshop AXXS 2002 2004 Carola Eisenberg addresses Student PHR at Dartmouth College March 2008 GHSM notes University of Rochester honors Dr Carola Eisenberg with its highest award given annually the George Eastman Award APA s Human Rights Award goes jointly to Drs Leon and Carola Eisenberg Carola Eisenberg M D papers at the Countway Medical Library of Harvard Medical School Carola Eisenberg Archives at MIT where she had been Dean of Students 1972 1978 before leaving to become HMS Dean of Students Carola Eisenberg s family Harvard Catalyst Profile Archived 2011 07 19 at the Wayback Machine Carola Eisenberg papers 1945 2006 inclusive 1977 2006 bulk H MS c254 Harvard Medical Library Francis A Countway Library of Medicine Boston Mass Leon Eisenberg papers 1905 2009 inclusive 1968 2005 bulk H MS c196 Harvard Medical Library Francis A Countway Library of Medicine Boston Mass Manfred S Guttmacher Papers 1928 1964 inclusive H MS c205 Harvard Medical Library Francis A Countway Library of Medicine Boston Mass Alan F Guttmacher papers 1860 1898 1974 H MS c 155 Harvard Medical Library Francis A Countway Library of Medicine Boston Mass Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Carola B Eisenberg amp oldid 1212068485, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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