Leon Eisenberg (August 8, 1922 – September 15, 2009)[1] was an American child psychiatrist, social psychiatrist[2] and medical educator who "transformed child psychiatry by advocating research into developmental problems".[3]
Eisenberg completed the first outcome study of autistic children in adolescence and recognized patterns of language use as the best predictor of prognosis. Of the two first studies of the outcome of infantile autism, he reported the American study in the American Journal of Psychiatry in 1956, and the UK study was reported in JCPP[7] shortly afterward by Victor Lotter [8] and Sir Michael Rutter. Eisenberg also studied and identified the use of rapid rea turn to school as the key treatment in the management of the separation anxiety in an underlying school phobia.
He was principal investigator (PI) on the first grant from the Psychopharmacology Branch of NIMH for RCTs in child psychopharmacology. From a concern for evidence-based care, well before the phrase was coined, he introduced randomized controlled trials (RCTs) in psychopharmacology and showed that "tranquillizing drugs were inferior to placebo in the treatment of anxiety disorders, whereas stimulant drugs were effective in controlling hyperactivity." [citation needed]
Eisenberg completed the first RCTs of psychiatric consultation to social agencies and the utility of brief psychotherapy in anxiety disorders. He published a forceful critique of Konrad Lorenz's instinct theory and established the usefulness of distinguishing "disease" from "illness". He has highlighted the environmental context as a determinant of the phenotype emerging from a given genotype, and from the late 1990s through 2006, he had been involved with developing conferences and resources for medical educators in various specialties that would help them incorporate into courses with their current and future students, the tidal wave of new information in genomics yet to puzzle future clinicians. This interest may have been encouraged by his stepson, Alan Guttmacher, then acting head of the National Human Genome Research Institute. For many decades, Eisenberg had criticized psychoanalysis from several platforms. [citation needed]
The scientific contributions of Eisenberg include:
The first longitudinal follow-up of Leo Kanner's original cases of autism
A study that identified the roots of social phobia in parental anxiety
The first clinical trial of the effectiveness of psychiatric consultation in a social agency
The first randomized controlled trial of stimulant drugs in adolescents
The first randomized clinical trial of brief psychotherapy
A forceful critique of Lorenz's theory of instincts and imprinting
An early statement of the distinction between "disease" (what doctors deal with) and "illness" (what patients suffer)
A widely cited critique of the oscillation of psychiatry between brain-centered and mind-centered approaches arguing for the integration of the two
A synthesis of the evidence on the importance of training primary care physicians to recognize and treat depression
Papers that highlight molding the brain structure by social experience
Publications putting inheritance in an environmental context as a determinant of risk and resilience.
Eisenberg is known as "the father of prevention science in psychiatry"[9]
Eisenberg was proudest of the Diversity Lifetime Achievement Award he received in 2001 for his role in inaugurating affirmative action at HMS in 1968 and sustaining it as chairman of the Admissions Committee from 1969 to 1974. He regards that as his most important contribution to Harvard Medical School.
He and his wife, Carola B. Eisenberg, former dean of students, first at MIT, then at Harvard Medical School, had been active with Physicians for Human Rights, which as an organization received a Nobel Peace Prize in 1997 for its International Campaign to Ban Landmines.
In mid-2009 (June 22, 2009), a Leon Eisenberg Chair in Child Psychiatry was named at Children's Hospital Boston.[10] The first chairholder of the Leon Eisenberg Professorship in Child Psychiatry is David R. DeMaso, MD, HMS Professor of Psychiatry and Psychiatrist-in-Chief at Children's Hospital Boston.[11]
Among his friends and professional colleagues, Eisenberg was known for his humor and wit, which he shared in lectures, publications, and even as Recording Secretary for the American Academy of Arts and Sciences (sometimes in the form of haiku).[12]
Attendees at the Annual Leon Eisenberg Award at the Harvard Faculty Club in Cambridge, Massachusetts, end the evening – after the Awardee's lecture – with informal sharing of "Leon's jokes to the best of our memories". While it is often assumed that these quips and stories were Eisenberg originals, research shows that many if not most – or even all – "had a prior history".
Former president of Case Institute of Technology (then Case-Western Reserve), Edward M. Hundert, while he was a medical student (class of 1984) at Harvard Medical School, played the part of Eisenberg in the HMS Class Folies, in which (as his character) he sang the supposedly satirical but actually complimentary tune, "I feel witty!"[citation needed]
1938 - 1939: Editor of Olney High School newspaper
1939: Graduation from Olney High School, Philadelphia PA; won a Mayor's Scholarship to College (based on the College Entrance Board Examinations)
1944: AB – College of University of Pennsylvania (nearly straight As)
1944: Applied to medical schools with nearly straight A's in college; turned down by all those schools; University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine accepts him after intervention by Pennsylvania legislator on behalf of outstanding student Leon Eisenberg
1946: Graduated valedictorian of his medical school class but denied (along with the seven other Jews who applied) an internship at the University of Pennsylvania hospital; went to Mt. Sinai Hospital in New York City instead
1946: MD – University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine
1946 - 1947: Rotating Intern, Mt. Sinai Hospital, New York City (discovered psychiatry)
1947 - 1948: Instructor in Physiology, University of Pennsylvania
1952 - 1954: Fellow in Child Psychiatry, Johns Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore, MD – works with Leo Kanner. Eisenberg would join him in his exploration of the newly identified psychiatric disorder, early infantile autism,[14] paying special attention to the social, and especially, the family setting of the children in which it appeared. Becomes Kanner's protégé and spread his mentor's Refrigerator mother theory until the end of the fifties. For example, in 1955 he told Johns Hopkins Medical Association that the case of a mother who let one of her baby twins die because he was crying off scientific schedule "can serve as a paradigm of the emotional refrigeration that has been the common lot of the autistic child."[15] Later he seemed to regret this period and said his doubts about psychoanalysis were encouraged by Kanner.[16]
1953 - 1955: Instructor in Psychiatry, Johns Hopkins University
1955: Certified in Psychiatry, American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology
1958 - 1961: Associate Professor of Psychiatry, Johns Hopkins University (Became Chief of Child Psychiatry 2 years before actual promotion to full professor)
1959: Became Chief of Child Psychiatry at Johns Hopkins upon the retirement of Kanner (became full professor 2 years later, in 1961)
1959 - 1967: Chief of Child Psychiatry, The Johns Hopkins Hospital
1960: Certified in Child Psychiatry, American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology
1961 - 1967: Professor of Child Psychiatry, Johns Hopkins University
1962: launched the first randomized clinical trial of a psychiatric medicine (childhood clinical psychopharmacology)
1967: months after arriving to chair the psychiatry department at Massachusetts General Hospital, Eisenberg was asked to join a small committee, including HMS Professors Jon Beckwith, Ed Kravitz, and David Potter, that was pushing to increase the number of African-American students at the medical school
1967 - 1993: Professor of Psychiatry, Harvard Medical School
1969: first HMS entering class to include black students, who had been recruited through the efforts of Eisenberg and his colleagues
1992 - 2009: Honorary Senior Staff Psychiatrist, Children's Hospital, Boston
1993: Retirement from Harvard Medical School (then mandatory at age 65); becomes professor emeritus; continued to serve actively without pay but with his original chairman's office
1993 - 2009: Maude and Lillian Presley Professor of Social Medicine and Professor of Psychiatry, Emeritus, Harvard Medical School
Institute of Medicine of the National Academy of Sciences (1973–2009); Council, Institute of Medicine, '75-'77; advisory committee, Strategies for the Prevention of Disease and the Promotion of Health, '77; membership committee, '78-'82; Program Committee, '79-'81; speaker, 1980 Annual Meeting; Research Panel, '86-'89; steering committee, National Strategy for Aids, '86-'89; Board on Health Sciences Policy, '88-'91; chair, Committee on Unintended Pregnancy and the Well-Being of Children and Families, '93-'95; chair, Committee on Building Bridges in the Brain, Behavioral and Clinical Sciences 1999–2000; chair, Interdisciplinary/Bridging Work In Health Disparities—Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Health and Society Scholars, October 13, 2008, at IOM Annual Meeting in Boston, Massachusetts.
Eisenberg served on many academic and other committees at Johns Hopkins, Harvard, Massachusetts General Hospital, and Children's Hospital Boston. He was typically among the first thought and invited to such committees because of his breadth.
Attempts to identify a full set of such committees are proceeding.
Themes of most recent writing
Eisenberg is credited by numerous colleagues with "simple and direct" prose (Arthur Kleinman, Norma Ware, etc.). He will be remembered most for his writings in these areas, though his encyclopedic comprehension reached much more broadly:
Evidence-based medicine
Capacity of academics to accept ideas that are absurd and later rejected
Why and how did psychoanalysis come to be so dominant for so long (the triumph of psychopharmacology over psychotherapy and changes in the way care was financed) has been explored repeatedly, but outlined here in two papers for different Josiah Macy Conferences:
"Modern Psychiatry: Challenges in Educating Health Professionals to Meet New Needs"
"The Challenge of Neuroscience: Behavioral Science, Neurology, and Psychiatry"
Diagnostic classifications (see below) – a theme continued from the very beginning of his career
Issues in rewriting the entire psychiatric taxonomy at one time (Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders = DSM): COI, empirical evidence to support DSM changes, timing of revisions
Complicity of the medical and psychiatric professionals in torture.
Criticizing the replacement of patient interests with the profit motive in healthcare.[20]
The relationship between the pharmaceutical industry and medical education through sponsorship and educational programs.
Integration of genetics in health professional education[21]
Resolving the conflict between integrative medicine and evidence-based biomedicine[22][23]
Later autobiographical reflections: "Were We Asleep at the Switch?"
Eisenberg wrote a 'mini-autobiography' which he named "Were We Asleep at the Switch?".[24] Eisenberg suggested that a switch from 'mind' to 'body' has taken place in psychiatry as a discipline, which led to overuse of medication. He also argued that, while medical scientists were worrying about the tedious science at the base of medical practice and healthcare decisions for the general public, "money" and monied interests had been making de facto decisions for the populace about how things that affected them deeply were going to be done. In this view, the overwhelming impact of economic considerations over emerging bodies of expert knowledge may have rendered and might continue to render futile the professional contributions of many brilliant, timely, and concerned working scientists.[citation needed]
A 2012 article in the German weekly publication Der Spiegel gives an account of an interview Eisenberg gave in 2009, seven months before his death. It quotes him as saying, "ADHD is a prime example of a fabricated disease... The genetic predisposition to ADHD is completely overrated." Instead of prescribing a 'pill', Eisenberg said, psychiatrists should determine whether there are psychosocial reasons that could lead to behavioral problems.[25]
Earliest papers
Bazett H. C. Love L. Newton L. Eisenberg L. Day R. & Forster R. (1948) Temperature changes in blood flowing in arteries and veins in man Pub. J Appl Physiol pp. 1:3-19.
Eisenberg L. (1953) Treatment of the emotionally disturbed pre-adolescent child Pub. Proc Child Research Clinic Woods Schools 35:30-41.
Kanner L. & Eisenberg L. (1955) Child psychiatry; mental deficiency Pub. American Journal of Psychiatry, 111:520-523.
Eisenberg, L. (1956), The autistic child in adolescence Pub. American Journal of Psychiatry 112, pp. 607–612. Reprinted in: Alexander et al., eds. Psychopathology Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1959.
Kanner L. & Eisenberg L. (1956) Child psychiatry; mental deficiency Pub. Am J Psychiat, 112:531-534.
Kanner, L. & Eisenberg L. (1956) Early Infantile Autism 1943–1955 Pub. American Journal of Orthopsychiatry 26, pp. 55–65. Reprinted in: Alexander et al., eds. Op. cit. Reprinted in Psychiat. Res. Repts. 1957 (April), American Psychiatric Assn., pp. 55–65.
Eisenberg L. (1956) The parent-child relationship and the physician Pub. AMA J Dis of Children, 91:153-157.
Eisenberg L. (1956) Dynamic considerations underlying the management of the brain-damaged child Pub GP, 14:101-106.
Glaser K & Eisenberg L. (1956) Maternal deprivation Pub. Pediatrics, 18:626-642.
Kanner L & Eisenberg L. (1957) Child psychiatry: mental deficiency Pub. Am J Psychiat, 113:617.
Eisenberg L. (1957) Psychiatric implications of brain damage in children Pub. Psychiatric Quarterly, 31:72-92.
Eisenberg L. (1957) Progress in neuropsychiatry Pub. J Ped, 51:334-349.
Eisenberg L. (1957) The course of childhood schizophrenia Pub. Arch Neurol Psychiat, 78:69-83.
Kanner L. & Eisenberg L. (1957) Childhood problems in relation to the family Pub. Pediatrics, 20:155-164.
Kanner L. & Eisenberg L. (1958) Child psychiatry; Mental Deficiency Pub. Am J Psychiat, 114:609-615.
Eisenberg L. (1958) School phobia: a study in the communication of anxiety Pub. Am J Psychiat, 114:712-718. Reprinted in: Trapp EP and Himmelstein P, eds. Readings on the exceptional child. New York: Appleton, 1962. Reprinted in: Bobbs-Merrill Reprint Series in the Social Sciences, 1966, p. 433. Reprinted in: Davids A, ed. Issues in abnormal child psychology. California: Brooks/Cole, 1973.
Eisenberg L. (1958) Discussion: roundtable symposium on desegregation (segregation-integration) Pub. Am J Orthopsychiat, 28:33-35.
Eisenberg L. (1958) An evaluation of psychiatric consultation service for a public agency Pub. Am J Public Health, 48(6):742-749.
Eisenberg L. (1958) Emotional determinants of mental deficiency Pub. Arch Neurol Psychiat, 80:114-121.
Eisenberg L. (1958) Diagnosis, genesis, and clinical management of school phobia Pub. Ped Clin North America, 645–666.
Eisenberg L. Marlowe B. & Hastings M. (1958) Diagnostic services for maladjusted foster children: An orientation toward an acute need Pub. Am J Orthopsychiat, 28(4):750-763.
Kanner L & Eisenberg L. (1959) Child psychiatry and mental deficiency Pub. Am J Psychiat, 115:608-611.
Eisenberg L. Ascher E. & Kanner L. (1959) A clinical study of Gilles de la Tourette's disease (maladie des tics) in children Pub. Am J Psychiat, 115:715-523.
Eisenberg L. (1959) Office evaluation of specific reading disability in children Pub. Pediatrics, 23(5):997-1003.
Rodriguez A, Rodriguez M, & Eisenberg L. (1959) The outcome of school phobia: a follow up study Pub. Am J Psychiat, 116:540-544.
Eisenberg L. (1959) The pediatric management of school phobia Pub. J Pediatrics, 55(6):758-766.
Eisenberg L. (1960) Child psychiatry; mental deficiency Pub. Am J Psychiat, 116:604.
Eisenberg L. (1960) Conceptual problems in relating brain and behavior Pub. Am J Orthopsychiat, 30:37-48.
Cytryn L. Gilbert A. & Eisenberg L. (1960) The effectiveness of tranquilizing drugs plus supportive psychotherapy in treating behavior disorders of children Pub. Am J Orthopsychiat, 30:113-129.
Eisenberg L. (1960) The challenge of change Pub. Child Welfare, 39:11-18.
Lesser L. Ashenden B. Debuskey M. & Eisenberg L. (1960) A clinical study of anorexia nervosa in children Pub. Am J Orthopsychiat, 30:572-580.
Eisenberg L. and Gruenberg E. (1961) The current status of secondary prevention in child psychiatry Pub. Am J Orthopsychiat, 31:355-367.
Eisenberg L. Gilbert A. Cytryn L. & Molling PA. (1961) The effectiveness of psychotherapy alone and in conjunction with perphenazine and placebo in the treatment of neurotic and hyperkinetic children Pub. Am J Psychiat, 117:1088-1093.
Bahn AK. Chandler CA. & Eisenberg L. (1961) Diagnostic and demographic characteristics of patients seen in outpatient psychiatric clinics for an entire state (Maryland): implications for the psychiatrist and the mental health program planner Pub. Am J Psychiat, 117:769-777.
Eisenberg L. (1961) The strategic deployment of the child psychiatrist in preventive psychiatry Pub. J Child Psychol Psychiat. 1961; 2:229-241. Reprinted in: Proc III World Congress on Psychiatry. Montreal, pp. 280–284.
Eisenberg L. (1961) Child psychiatry; mental deficiency 1960 Pub. Am J Psychiat, 117:601-604.
Eisenberg L. Landowne E. Wilner D. & Imber S. (1962) The use of teacher ratings in a mental health study: a method for measuring the effectiveness of a therapeutic nursery program Pub. Am J Pub Health, 52:18-28.
Eisenberg L. (1962) The sins of the fathers: urban decay and social pathology Pub. Am J Orthopsychiatry.32:5-17. Presented as lecture at 55th Annual Meeting of The Massachusetts Association for Mental Health, June 4, 1968.
Bahn A. Chandler C. & Eisenberg L. (1962) Diagnostic characteristics related to services in psychiatric clinics for children Pub. Milbank Mem Fund Quart, 40:289-318.
Molling P. Lockner A. Sauls R. & Eisenberg L. (1962) Committed delinquent boys: The impact of perphenazine and placebo Pub. Arch Gen Psychiatry, 1:70-76.
Eisenberg L. (1962) Preventive psychiatry Pub. Annu Rev Med, 13:343-360.
Eisenberg L. (1962) Child psychiatry; mental deficiency Pub. Am J Psychiatry, 118:600-605.
Eisenberg L. (1962) Possibilities for a preventive psychiatry Pub. Pediatrics, 30:815-828.
Eisenberg L. (1962) If not now, when? Pub. Am J Orthopsychiatry.32:781-793. Reprinted in: Canada's Mental Health Suppl #36, April 1963. Reprinted in: World Mental Health. 1963; 5:48-64. Reprinted in: David HP, ed. International Trends in Mental Health. New York: McGraw Hill, 1965. Reprinted in: Child and Family. 1965(1); 4:84-91.
Eisenberg L. Lachman R. Molling P. Lockner A. Mizelle J. & Conners K. (1963) A psychopharmacologic study in a training school for delinquent boys Pub. Am J Orthopsychiatry, 33:431-447.
Eisenberg, L. (Jan 1966) Can Human Emotions Be Changed? Pub. Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, p. 29
Eisenberg L. (1967) Clinical considerations in the psychiatric evaluation of intelligence Pub. Zubin J and Jervis GA, Eds. Psychopathology of mental development. New York: Grune & Stratton :502 513
Eisenberg L. (1967) Social class and individual development In: Robert W. Gibson, Ed. Crosscurrents in Psychiatry and Psychoanalysis. Philadelphia and Toronto: J.B. Lippincott, London: Pitman Medical. [Cited (1981) in Sir Michael Rutter's Maternal Deprivation Reassessed Pub. Penguin Modern Psychology.]
Eisenberg L. (1968) The social development of human intelligence Pub. Harvard Medical Alumni Bulletin, 43:2-7; (reprinted 1969) in H. Freemen, Ed. Progress in Mental Health. Churchill.
Eisenberg L, Berlin, CI, Dill A. and Frank S. (December 1968) Class and race effects on the intelligibility of monosyllables Pub. Child Development, 39(4):1077-1089
Eisenberg L. (1968) Au-dela de l'heridite: le test de l'evolution Pub. La Psychiatrie de l'Enfant, 11:572-588
Eisenberg L. (November 1968) The interaction of biological and experiential factors in schizophrenia Pub. Journal of Psychiatric Research, 6:403-409
Eisenberg L. (April 1969) Child psychiatry: the past quarter century Pub. American Journal of Orthopsychiatry, 39(3):389-401 Reprinted in: Davids A, Ed. Issues in abnormal child psychology. California: Brooks/Cole, 1973
Koupernik C. & Eisenberg L. (1969) Réflexions sur l'autisme infantile (1943–1969) [Reflections on infantile autism (1943–1969)]. Confrontations Psychiatriques (Psychiatric Confrontations), 2(3):31-55
Conners C., Rothschild G. Eisenberg L. Schwartz L. & Robinson E. (August 1969) Dextroamphetamine sulfate in children with learning disorders Pub. Archives of General Psychiatry, 21:182-190
Rutter M. Lebovici S. Eisenberg L. Sneznevskij A. V. Sadoun R. Brooke E. & Lin T. Y. (December 1969) A triaxial classification of mental disorders in childhoodPub. Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, 10:41-61 [Cited (1981) in Sir Michael Rutter's Maternal Deprivation Reassessed Penguin Modern Psychology
Eisenberg, L. (1972) The Human Nature of Human Nature Pub. Science Vol.176, p. 126
Eisenberg L. (1976) Psychiatric intervention Pub. Scientific American, 229; 116 127. Reprinted in: Humber JM and Almeder RF (Eds.) Biomedical Ethics and the Law. New York: Plenum, 1976. Reprinted in: Humber JM and Almeder RF (Eds.) Biomedical Ethics and the Law. 2nd Edition. New York: Plenum, 1979, pp. 109 120
Eisenberg L. (December 1977) The perils of prevention: a cautionary note Pub. New England Journal of Medicine, 297:1230 1232
Eisenberg, L. (21 January 1986) Mindlessness and brainlessness in psychiatry The Eli Lilly Lecture, Winter Quarterly Meeting. Royal College of Psychiatrists, London Pub. British Journal of Psychiatry, 148:497-508
Eisenberg, L. (1986) Rudolf Virchow: the physician as politician Pub. Medicine and War 2(4):243-250
Eisenberg, L. (1990) From circumstance to mechanism in pediatrics during the Hopkins century Pub. Pediatrics 85:42-49
Eisenberg, L. (Fall 1992) Subject and object in the grammar of medicine Pub. Penn Medicine 6:18-28
Eisenberg L. (1995) The Social Construction of the Human Brain Pub. American Journal of Psychiatry 152: 1563–1575 Translated into Italian as: La Costruzione Sociale Del Cervello Umano Sapere 62(5):46-58, 1996.
Eisenberg L. (1998)Nature, niche and nurture: the role of social experience in transforming genotype into phenotype. Pub. Academic Psychiatry, 22:213-222. Reprinted in Epidemiologia E Psichiatria Sociale 1999; 8:190-7. Translated as: Naturaleza, Entorno Y Crianza. El Papel de la Experiencia Social en la Transformacion del Genotipo en Fenotipo. Psychiatria Publica 1999; 11:139-46.
Eisenberg L. (1999) Would cloned human beings be like sheep? Pub. New England Journal of Medicine, 340: 471–475. Reprinted in Klotzko AJ (Ed) (2001) The Cloning Source Book. N.Y., Oxford University Press pp. 70–79
Eisenberg, L. (1999) Does social medicine still matter in an era of molecular medicine? Pub. Journal of Urban Health. 76: 164–175.
Eisenberg, L. (1999) Whatever Happened to the Faculty on the Way to the Agora? Pub. Archives of Internal Medicine 125:251-6
Eisenberg, L. (2000) Is Psychiatry More Mindful or Brainier than it was a Decade Ago? Pub. British Journal of Psychiatry 176.1-5
Eisenberg, L. (2001) Good Technical Outcome, Poor Service Experience: A Verdict on Contemporary Medical Care? Pub. Journal of the American Medical Association 285:2639-2641; in reply. Journal of the American Medical Association 2001;286:1315.
Eisenberg, L. (2002) From Molecules to Mind Pub. Eastern Mediterranean Health Journal 7:3
Eisenberg, L. (2004) Social Psychiatry and the Human Genome: Contextualizing Heritability Pub. British Journal of Psychiatry, 184:101-103
Eisenberg L. (2004) Letter to the Editor: Which Image for Lorenz? Pub. American Journal of Psychiatry. 161:1760
Eisenberg L. (2007) When "ADHD" was "the Brain-Damaged Child Pub. Journal of Child and Adolescent Psychopharmacology 17(3):279-283
Many of Eisenberg's books and papers have been translated into both European and non-European languages and have been widely cited.
Papers written from consulting
Kleinman A, Eisenberg L, Desjarlais R (Eds) (1995), World Mental Health: Priorities and Problems in Low-Income Countries. New York: Oxford University Press.[26]
Translated into Spanish as: Salud Mental en el Mundo by I. Levav and R. Gonzalez and published by Organizacion Pan Americana del Salud, Washington, 1997.
Translated into Italian as: [La Salute Mentale nel Mondo: Problemi e priorità La Salute Mentale nel Mondo: Problemi e priorità nelle popolazioni a basso reddito] by C. Belotti, G. de Girolamo, A. Fioritti, and V. Melaga and published by Il Mulino/Alfa tape, Bologna, Italy, 1998.[27][28]
Translated into Ukrainian 2001.
Awards
Sc. D. (Hon), University of Manchester, UK (1973)
Sc. D. (Hon), University of Massachusetts, USA (1991)
Several late-in-life and posthumous awards were developed to continue the legacy of Eisenberg.[30]
Leon Eisenberg Chair in Child Psychiatry, Children's Hospital Boston(named June 22, 2009)[31]
The Leon Eisenberg Award, conferred annually (in the Spring) by the Program in Mental Health and Developmental Disabilities (MH/DD), Children's Hospital Boston, beginning April 28, 2010.[32]
^Leon Eisenberg papers, 1905-2009 (inclusive), 1968-2005 (bulk). HMS c196. Harvard Medical Library, Francis A. Countway Library of Medicine, Boston, Mass.
^Child 'autism' is described, The Baltimore Sun, February 26, 1955, page 6
^Eisenberg L., August 2010, Were we all asleep at the switch? A personal reminiscence of psychiatry from 1940 to 2010, Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica, volume 122, issue 2, 189-102, https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1600-0447.2010.01544.x
^A series of annual conferences on the future of integrating the avalanche of genetics research results from biomedical research in health professional education was sponsored by the Josiah Macy Foundation and coordinated from Eisenberg's office at Harvard Medical School
^Eisenberg, L. 2000. Why is there a conflict between complementary and alternative medicine and the medical establishment? Education of Health Professionals in Complementary/Alternative Medicine: Proceedings of a Conference Chaired by Alfred P. Fishman, MD, Edited by Mary Hager. Phoenix, Arizona, November 2–5, 2000. Sponsored by Josiah Macy Foundation.