Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Lee Salk

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Name
  
Lee Salk

Role
  
Psychologist


Siblings
  
Jonas Salk, Herman Salk

Lee Salk httpsiytimgcomviTwgN82QKPNUhqdefaultjpg

Died
  
May 2, 1992, Manhattan, New York City, New York, United States

Books
  
What every child would like his parents to know

Nephews
  
Peter Salk, Darrell Salk, Jonathan Salk

People also search for
  
Jonas Salk, Herman Salk, Jay Litvin

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Lee Salk, AB, MA, PhD, (December 22, 1926 - May 2, 1992) was a child psychologist and author who is credited with discovering the calming effect the sound of a heartbeat has on infants.

Contents

During the last third of his life, Dr. Salk made a great deal of public appearances on various television shows and lecture halls. He used these venues to dispense advice on how to rear children, especially infants.

Early life

Salk was the younger son of Russian Jewish immigrants, Dora (Press) and Daniel Salk. He was born and reared in New York. Jonas Salk, inventor of the polio vaccine, was his older brother.

Salk attended the University of Michigan.

Professional work

Salk's published work investigated the effect of retirement on mortality, the effect of the mother's heartbeat on the newborn, and the relationship between adverse maternal and perinatal conditions and later self-destructive behavior. He was the author of eight books.

Personal life

Salk was married twice, first to Kerstin and then Mary Jane. He had two children from his first marriage, a son Eric and daughter Pia.

Salk developed cancer and died in hospital in Manhattan at age 65 on May 2, 1992. Salk was a professor at Cornell University Medical Center.

References

Lee Salk Wikipedia