Eva Frommer

Eva Frommer
Eva Frommer c.1965
Frommer c. 1965
Born1927
Berlin, Germany
Died8 August 2004 (aged 76−77)
Forest Row, England
NationalityGerman
CitizenshipBritish
Alma materRoyal Free Hospital
Known forAttention to separation effects in parenting and pre-school children, prescribing antidepressants to children, "Diagnosis and Treatment in Clinical Child Psychiatry, hospital-based art therapies and Eurythmy
Scientific career
FieldsChild psychiatry, Anthroposophy, Art therapy
InstitutionsMaudsley Hospital, St Thomas' Hospital, London

Eva Ann Frommer FRCPsych (6 September 1927 – 8 August 2004) was a German-born British consultant child psychiatrist, working at St Thomas' Hospital in South London. Her specialism was to apply the arts and eurythmy to the treatment of pre-school child patients, inspired by the work of the Austrian anthroposophist, Rudolf Steiner. Early in her career she attracted criticism through association with her senior colleague, the controversial psychiatrist William Sargant, whom she followed for a time in the application of sleep therapy and antidepressant prescription to children.

As a child, she became part of the Jewish exodus fleeing from persecution in Nazi Germany.[citation needed] Frommer was a great promoter of the arts for children and was modestly a philanthropist.[citation needed]