Education
Albert Einstein College of Medicine.
assistant pediatrician assistant professor
Albert Einstein College of Medicine.
He is an Assistant Professor of Pediatrics at the Keck School of Medicine at the University of Southern California. Karp is best known for his techniques for calming infants, promoting sleep and communicating with toddlers. The New York Times said “If there is such a person as a "baby whisperer", it is the pediatrician Doctor Harvey Karp.”
Karp is the author of best-selling books and DVDs, The Happiest Baby on the Block, (2002, 2015), The Happiest Toddler on the Block (2004, 2008) and The Happiest Baby Guide to Great Sleep (2012), which have been published in over 20 languages.
He was assistant clinical professor of pediatrics at the University of California, Los Angeles School of Medicine from 1989-2009.
He appeared as a regular contributor to the Lifetime cable television show, “Growing Up Together” from 1990-1992. In 2009, he became an assistant professor of pediatrics at the University of Southern California Keck School of Medicine.
Karp has served on the advisory boards of the Green Guide, Babycenter.com, Parents, Ser Padres, and American Baby magazines. Karp’s infant calming technique is based on recreating the essential elements of the experience of living in the womb.
Human babies, according to Karp, are born less developed than other mammals.
Karp calls the first three months of life the "fourth trimester". Karp hypothesizes that that all babies are born with a "calming reflex" that quickly relaxes most fussy babies when they are stimulated in a way that precisely mirror sensations that babies experience in the womb. A 2011, University of Chicago survey of home visitors in Illinois reported a high level of satisfaction among parent educators teaching Happiest Baby techniques.
Columbia Broadcasting System news reports that "Critics say Karp is riding to fame on the strength of his patients" Very Important Person parents, who include Michelle Pfeiffer, Pierce Brosnan and Madonna.
Endorsements from several stars appear on his book jacket and video cover." Some doctors have also expressed concern that babies may accidentally be left to sleep face down, a position which increases the risk of sudden infant death syndrome. Karp explicitly warns parents not to leave babies in this position.
Frenken has argued against Karp’s recommendation of the use of tight swaddling and the concept of a "calming reflex": The effect of swaddling is not based on reflexes: First a releasing stimulus is missing, because swaddling most probably works by the decrease of proprioceptive and tactile stimulation. Secondly, the reflex response is missing, because any reflex always consists of a movement released by muscles.
The child does not move but falls asleep by swaddling.
Additionally, no known reflex alters the state of consciousness, but swaddling obviously does. Number aspect of Karp"s calming techniques concerning the psychological or physical consequences on babies has ever been tested scientifically.