Jackson, Edith Banfield, 1895-1977

Variant names
Dates:
Birth 1895
Death 1977
German, English

Biographical notes:

Edith Banfield Jackson, pediatrician and child psychiatrist, was born in Colorado Springs, Colorado, on January 2, 1895, the daughter of William and Helen Fiske (Banfield) Jackson. She was graduated from Vassar College in 1916 and in 1921 received her M.D. from Johns Hopkins University.

Following internships in internal medicine at the State University of Iowa Hospital and in pediatrics at Bellevue Hospital in New York City, EBJ went to work at the U.S. Children's Bureau and collaborated with Martha May Eliot and others on the New Haven Rickets study at Yale University. In 1930 EBJ went to Europe to study at the Vienna Psychoanalytic Institute, where she was psychoanalyzed by Sigmund Freud. In Vienna EBJ was able to combine her interests in pediatrics and psychiatry by helping Dorothy Burlingham and Anna Freud establish an experimental, all-day nursery school, where the psychiatric conditions of very young children were observed and treated. EBJ helped many Austrians obtain visas to the United States; her involvement with refugees continued long after she left Europe (see #6-8).

In 1936 EBJ returned to the United States and received a joint appointment in Pediatrics and Psychiatry at Yale Medical School while also joining the staff of the Grace-New Haven Community Hospital (later the Yale-New Haven Hospital) where she assumed direction of the psychological services for children. Increasingly she became involved with maternity and newborn services; she was particularly concerned with the impersonal approach to birth common at most hospitals, especially the separation of mother and child after delivery, and the discouragement of breast-feeding. In an effort to prevent what she felt were the harmful psychological side-effects of such practices to mother, father, and child, in 1946 she helped establish Grace-New Haven's rooming-in unit, where the child stayed with the mother and both parents learned to care for their newborn infant relatively unaffected by hospital rules and staff convenience. Along with the rooming-in plan EBJ advocated natural childbirth and breast-feeding through pre-natal instruction and concerted staff support. With other staff members EBJ wrote "Management of Breast-Feeding"; there were over 4000 requests for reprints (see #157). During the following decades EBJ's interdepartmental, multidisciplinary approach to childbirth was widely accepted and copied across the country. In New Haven, EBJ worked with other professionals to implement the interdisciplinary methods she had helped to develop. She served as psychiatric consultant to the Betsy Ross Nursery and was a member of the board of directors of the Family Service of New Haven from 1948 to 1960.

EBJ directed the Rooming-In Project between 1946 and 1953. She became clinical professor of pediatrics and psychiatry in 1949 and retired from Yale in 1959 with emeritus rank. In the same year she moved to Denver, Colorado, and was appointed visiting professor of pediatrics and psychiatry at the University of Colorado School of Medicine. Between 1962 and 1970 she was in charge of the Rooming-in Unit at Colorado General Hospital and devoted much time to the problems of single mothers (see #71-75).

EBJ contributed to numerous reports and was author or co-author of more than 20 articles for medical journals, as well as others for popular magazines. She participated in numerous professional organizations and was a director of the Sigmund Freud Archives in New York City (see #1). In 1964 the American Psychiatric Association presented EBJ with the Agnes McGavin Award for her contributions to preventive psychiatry, and in 1968 she received the C. Anderson Aldrich Award in child development from the American Academy of Pediatrics. In 1973 the National Center for the Prevention of Child Abuse and Neglect dedicated the EBJ Family Development Center in her honor.

EBJ lived alone most of her life and never married. She died on June 5, 1977, in Denver, Colorado, at the age of 82.

From the guide to the Papers, 1907-1977, (Schlesinger Library, Radcliffe Institute)

See the inventory for MC 304.

From the guide to the Additional papers, 1878-1977, (Schlesinger Library, Radcliffe Institute)

Physician.

From the description of Edith Banfield Jackson papers, 1939-1946. (Unknown). WorldCat record id: 70984590

Pediatrician and child psychiatrist, Jackson helped establish and directed a rooming-in unit, where a newborn child stayed with its mother, at the Grace-New Haven Community Hospital, later the Yale Medical Center.

From the description of Interview transcript, 1970. (Harvard University). WorldCat record id: 232007781

Edith Banfield Jackson was born in 1895. A graduate of Vassar College (B.A. 1916) and John Hopkins University (M.D. 1921), Jackson held various teaching positions at the Yale University School of Medicine from 1924 to 1929. After a brief hiatus in which she underwent training and analysis with Sigmund Freud, she returned to Yale in 1936 as professor in pediatrics and psychiatry and remained until her retirement in 1959. A child psychiatrist and pioneer in family-centered maternity and infant care and parent-infant bonding, she is best known for her work on the Yale Rooming-In Research Project. She developed the rooming-in plan to allow parents to have an increased role in the care of their newborn children within hospitals. From 1946 to 1952 Jackson directed the experimental rooming-in unit at the Grace-New Haven Community Hospital. The project served as the model for a new obstetrical unit at Yale-New Haven Hospital and stimulated change in the institutionalized care of mothers and infants.

From the description of Edith Banfield Jackson papers, 1947-1959 (inclusive). (Unknown). WorldCat record id: 702168948

From the guide to the Edith Banfield Jackson papers, 1947-1959, (Manuscripts and Archives)

Pediatrician and child psychiatrist (Vassar, 1916; Johns Hopkins University, M.D., 1921), Jackson studied at the Vienna Psychoanalytic Institute, where she was psychoanalyzed by Freud, helped Anna Freud and Dorothy Burlingham establish an experimental all-day nursery school, and aided Austrian-Jewish refugees. She taught pediatrics and psychiatry at Yale Medical School and the University of Colorado and helped establish and directed a rooming-in unit, where a newborn child stayed with its mother, at the Grace-New Haven Community Hospital and then at Colorado General Hospital.

From the description of Papers, 1878-1977 (inclusive). (Harvard University). WorldCat record id: 232006677

From the description of Additional papers, 1878-1977 (inclusive). (Harvard University). WorldCat record id: 528755168

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Subjects:

  • Abortion
  • Anorexia nervosa
  • Breastfeeding
  • Child analysis
  • Childbirth
  • Child care
  • Child development
  • Child psychiatry
  • Circumcision
  • Civil rights
  • Day care centers
  • Families
  • Family life education
  • Finance, Personal
  • Finger sucking
  • Health
  • Hospitals
  • Mental health
  • Infant health service
  • Infants
  • Jewish refugees
  • Labor (Obstetrics)
  • Marriage
  • Maternal and infant welfare
  • Medicine
  • Newborn infants
  • Newborn infants
  • Nursing
  • Obstetrics
  • Parent and child
  • Physician and patient
  • Physicians
  • Rooming
  • Sacco
  • Single-parent families
  • Thumb sucking
  • Voyages and travels
  • Women in medicine
  • Women pediatricians
  • Women psychiatrists
  • World War, 1939-1945
  • Youth and death
  • Newborn infants

Occupations:

  • Pediatricians
  • Physicians
  • Psychiatrists

Places:

  • United States (as recorded)
  • United States (as recorded)
  • U.S. (as recorded)
  • Vienna (Austria) (as recorded)
  • Diaries (as recorded)
  • United States (as recorded)