Selma Fraiberg

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Selma Fraiberg
Born March 8, 1918
Detroit, Michigan
Died December 19,1981
Fields Psychology, Psychoanalysis, Social Work
Institutions University of Michigan, Psychoanalytic Training Institute
Known for Psychoanalysis, Infant mental Health

Selma Fraiberg (1918–1981) was a child psychoanalyst, author and social worker. She studied infants with congenital blindness in the 1970s. She found that blind babies had three problems to overcome: learning to recognize parents from sound alone, learning about permanence of objects, acquiring a typical or healthy self-image. She also found that vision acts as a way of pulling other sensory modalities together and without sight babies are delayed. In addition to her work with blind babies, she also was one of the founders of the field of infant mental health and developed mental health treatment approaches for infants, toddlers and their families. Her work on intergenerational transmission of trauma such as described in her landmark paper entitled "Ghosts in the Nursery"[1] has had an important influence on the work of living psychoanalysts and clinical researchers such as Alicia Lieberman[2] and Daniel Schechter[3]

Personal life

Selma Fraiberg was born Selma Horwitz on March 8, 1918 in Detroit, Michigan.[4] Her mother was Dorella Horowitz and her father was Jack Horowitz.[5] Jack Horowitz took over the family poultry business, while Dorella was a stay at home mother.[4] In 1945 she married Louis Fraiberg who she met while studying at Wayne State University.[4] In 1956 Louis and Selma adopted their daughter Lisa.[4] In 1979 the Fraibergs moved to San Francisco.[4] In August 1981, Fraiberg was diagnosed with a malignant brain tumor. She died four months later on December 19, 1981 at the age of 63.[4]

Academic career

Selma Fraiberg graduated from Wayne State University with a Master's degree in social work in 1940.[6] She then went to the Detroit Psychoanalytic Institute to completer her psychoanalytic training.[6] After adopting Lisa in 1956 Fraiberg was a stay at home mom until she accepted a professorship in 1963.[4] From 1963 to 1979 she was the professor of psychoanalysis at the University of Michigan.[6] During this time she was also the director of the Child Development Project.[4] After moving to San Francisco Selma became the director of an infant-parent program at the San Francisco General Hospital.[4]

Author of several influential psychoanalytic texts such as: The Magic Years[7] and Clinical Studies in Infant Mental Health[8]

Contributions

Infant blindness studies

Selma Fraiberg’s research revolved around discovering the effects of visual deprivation in infants. Particularly, she wanted to look at the effects blindness had on ego development and organization of experience in infants.[9] One infant that was studied by Fraiberg contributed to two new findings. The infant, Toni, was considered normal blind, as defined by Fraiberg.[9] Prior to these findings it had been believed that an infant smiling response would only result from visual stimulus of a human. However, this was overturned when Toni would smile after hearing her mother’s voice.[9] A second new finding was related to stranger anxiety. Stranger anxiety had been thought to only be an effect of a visual distinction between a known face and an unknown face. This was also questioned when Toni would not smile in response to hearing a voice of anyone except her mother around the age of eight months old.[9]

Fraiberg also distinguished the importance of a blind infant’s mouth as a replacement to their deficiency in visual stimulus. She noted that blind infants use their mouth as a way to perceive the world much longer than non-blind infants.[10] Tactile perception is important to developing the difference between the inner and outer self. Since blind infants lack visual perceptions, they rely on their mouth for perceiving the world well into their second year of life.[10] This results in failure of differentiating between the self and non-self in blind infants at a normal age.

Mental health treatment for children

Selma Fraiberg not only researched blindness in infants, but also was a part of developing new techniques for mental health treatment of young children. One technique she proposed was called “kitchen table therapy.” In kitchen table therapy, Fraiberg would go into the homes of parents with young children, typically under the age of two.[11] There are three different approaches to kitchen table therapy. They are brief crisis intervention, developmental guidance-support treatment, and infant-parent psychotherapy.[12] Each type of therapy is used for different situations, depending on where Fraiberg or her colleagues thought the problems in the parent/child development relationship were stemming from. Brief crisis intervention was used when there was few, specific, situational events that resulted in a lack of helping the child develop. Developmental guidance-support treatment is used in situations where the baby may have a chronic illness or disorder and the parents are struggling to find a way to move beyond that problem. This therapy technique is used when parents are still capable of being good parents, but simply need assistance in how to do practice that. Infant-parent psychotherapy is used when the parents have their own struggles from their past which prevent them from developing an attachment with their child. The main goal of this technique is to rid the parents of their problem so it does not transfer onto the child.[12] The purpose of these three types of therapy is to prevent development and attachment delays in children.[11] These therapy techniques combine psychoanalysis, psychiatry, and social work practices to help parents and children establish foundations for development and attachment in the child’s first few years of life.[11]

Legacy

Fraiberg developed a new technique to approach infant and parent treatment. This approach for developing infant relationships with their parents until the age of two brought the treatment into the home and is still used today. Her practice was the start of infant mental health development and is still being used today, only with small adjustments and modifications to account for changing urban and rural lifestyles.[11] Fraiberg’s new approach to infant mental health was different than current approaches of her time. However, they continue to be the building blocks of infant mental health today.[13]

Fraiberg’s concept of “ghosts” in her infant mental health studies is still prominent in infant theories and studies today. In her paper “Ghosts in the Nursery,” Fraiberg said problems in infant development and attachment stem from the ghosts of their parents. The unremembered ghosts prevent parents from fully developing a deep attachment with their child that is important to their development.[14] This concept of ghosts is used as a function of psychotherapy. The function is helping the subject leave their ghosts behind and continue moving forward with their life.[15]

References

  1. Fraiberg S, Adelson E, Shapiro V (1975). Ghosts in the nursery. A psychoanalytic approach to the problems of impaired infant-mother relationships. Journal of the American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry, 14(3), 387–421.
  2. Lieberman AF, Padron E, Van Horn P, Harris WW (2005). Angels in the nursery: The intergenerational transmission of benevolent influences. Infant Mental Health Journal, 26(6), 504–520
  3. Schechter DS, Coots T, Zeanah CH, Davies, M, Coates SW, Trabka KA, Marshall RD, Liebowitz MR, Myers MM (2005). Maternal mental representations of the child in an inner-city clinical sample: Violence-related posttraumatic stress and reflective functioning. Attachment and Human Development, 7(3), 313–331.
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  7. Fraiberg, S.H. (1959). The Magic Years: Understanding and Handling the Problems of Early Childhood. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, Inc.
  8. Fraiberg, S. (1980). Clinical Studies in Infant Mental Health: The First Year of Life. New York: Basic Books, Inc.
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