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Eva Frommer

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2018

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This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC-BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
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Copyright © 2005. The Royal College of Psychiatrists.

Dr Frommer was a well-known figure both in the child psychiatry world of south London and internationally in the 1960s to 1980s. But because of her severe incapacitating illness in later life, her many services diminished and she, professionally, somewhat faded out of sight.

Eva was born on 6 September 1927 in Berlin to a scientist father and a violinist mother, and always reflected both the scientific and the artistic worlds in her own life. Being of Jewish descent, the family had to leave Germany and come to London, where Eva attended Waldorf (Steiner) schools and was a clever and musical pupil. She decided to study medicine and graduated from the Royal Free Hospital in 1952. She specialised in paediatrics at first, gaining the DCH in 1954. She later trained in psychiatry at the Maudsley, acquiring the DPM in 1962, when she also became a Member of the old RMPA. She became a Foundation Member of the Royal College of Psychiatrists in 1972, and a Fellow in 1981.

After the Maudsley, Eva worked in Sutton, then at St Thomas’ Hospital, where she developed child psychiatry in her own unique style. In addition to the out-patient clinic at St Thomas’ Hospital, where she worked in close conjunction with the paediatricians, she established a day hospital for children and families in Black Prince Road to which she introduced Waldorf education, anthroposophy, eurhythmy and art therapy. This was a lovely place to visit, an oasis in deprived and dreary Lambeth, because of its emphasis on colour and nature. Either paradoxically or holistically, according to one's point of view, she was also keen to use the newly developed antidepressant drugs for children, recognising childhood depression long before it became fashionable to do so. She published papers, among others, on the day hospital and use of antidepressants for children, and a textbook Diagnosis and Treatment in Clinical Child Psychiatry (Heinemann, 1972), which remains accessible and interesting. Another book, Voyage through Childhood into the Adult World (Pergamon, 1969) was originally written for medical students; in this Eva Frommer both expressed ideas from her own experience and from Steiner's theories of child development; she tried to lead the reader to understand things from a child's point of view, acknowledging and clarifying differences of temperament.

Eva Frommer also translated some of Rudolf Steiner's works, and one of these texts is still in use today. She had wide interests in art, travel, theatre and music, with her expertise sought in those fields. Sadly, her later illness severely curtailed physical expeditions. Eva retired from professional work in 1989 and died on 8 August 2004.

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