Harold Lief

American psychiatrist and psychoanalyst From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Harold I. Lief (1917–2007)[1] was an American psychiatrist and psychoanalyst. He was famous as an advocate of sex education.[2][3] Lief is credited with the introduction in the DSM of the "inhibited sexual desire".[4]

Quick facts Born, Died ...
Harold I. Lief
Born1917 (1917)
Died2007 (aged 8990)
EducationUniversity of Michigan; New York University School of Medicine; Columbia University
Occupationspsychiatrist, psychoanalyst
EmployerUniversity of Pennsylvania
Known forAdvocacy of sex education; introduction of "inhibited sexual desire" in the DSM
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Early life and education

Lief, who was born in Brooklyn, attended the University of Michigan and graduated from the New York University School of Medicine in 1942. Lief's psychoanalytic training was at Columbia University.[5]

Career

While a professor of psychiatry at the University of Pennsylvania, Lief started organizing the Center for the Study of Sex Education in Medicine In 1960. At the time, there were only three other medical schools with separate programs in sexology.[6]

References

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