Background
Salber, Eva Juliet was born on January 5, 1916 in Capetown, South Africa. Came to the United States, 1956, naturalized, 1961. Daughter of Moses and Fanny (Srolowitz) Salber.
( Available for the first time in paperback, Eva Salber's...)
Available for the first time in paperback, Eva Salber's The Mind Is Not the Heart (originally published in 1989), is the personal and political story of a white, Jewish, South African woman who practiced medicine for over fifty years among the impoverished—both rural and urban, black and white, in South Africa and later in the United States. Her lifelong dedication to providing health care to poor people was informed by a passionate vision of the link between social problems and medicine, accompanied by an embracing involvement with the communities in which she served. In this warm clear-eyed account, Dr. Salber presents not only her own personal journey, that of a professional woman, teacher, wife, and mother, but also the story of the people on the margins of society among whom she worked.
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Salber, Eva Juliet was born on January 5, 1916 in Capetown, South Africa. Came to the United States, 1956, naturalized, 1961. Daughter of Moses and Fanny (Srolowitz) Salber.
Bachelor of Medicine, Bachelor of Surgery, University Capetown, 1938. Department of Public Health, University Capetown, 1945. Doctor of Medicine, University Capetown, 1955.
Intern, Provincial Hospital, Port Elizabeth, South Africa intern, Elliot Sir Henry Hospital, Umtata, South Africa resident, Capetown Free Dispensary and Queen Elizabeth Hospital for Children, London, 1940-1944; research associate epidemiology, Harvard School Public Health, Boston, 1959-1961; senior research associate, Harvard School Public Health, Boston, 1961-1966; director, Martha Eliot Family Health Center, Boston, 1967-1969; senior associate, Harvard Center Community Health and Medical Care, Boston, 1969-1970; professor community and family medicine, Duke U., Durham, North Carolina, 1971-1982; professor emeritus, Duke U., Durham, North Carolina, 1982-1990. Consultant in field; Milton research associate Harvard School Public Health, Boston, 1957-1958. Lecturer Harvard Medical School, 1967-1970, U. North Carolina, 1972-1978.
( Available for the first time in paperback, Eva Salber's...)
(Will be shipped from US. Used books may not include compa...)
(Book by Salber, Eva J)
Senior bursar South Africa Council Industrial and Science Research, 1950-1955. Board directors North Carolina Student Rural Health Coalition, 1978-1990, North Carolina Black Church Project, Raleigh, 1980-1990, Community Mental Health Center, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, 1981-1983. Fellow American Public Health Association.
Member International Epidemiology Association, American Gerontological Society.
Married Harry Tarley Phillips, November 1, 1939. Children: David, Mark, Rosalie, Philip.