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American psychologist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Susan W. Coates (born 1940) is an American psychoanalyst, who has worked on gender dysphoria in children and early childhood trauma.[1]
Susan Coates | |
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Born | 1940 (age 83–84) |
Nationality | American |
Occupations |
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Academic work | |
Institutions | Columbia University Vagelos College of Physicians and Surgeons |
Coates was Director of the Childhood Gender Identity Service at St. Luke's–Roosevelt Hospital Center from 1980 to 1997.[2] In 1997, Coates was founding co-director of the Parent-Infant Program at the Columbia University Center for Psychoanalytic Training and Research.[3]
Coates is on the teaching faculty as a Clinical Professor of Medical Psychology in Psychiatry at the Columbia University Center for Psychoanalytic Training and Research.[3] Coates is also on the faculty of the Columbia University Department of Psychiatry.[4]
After the September 11, 2001 attacks, Coates provided mental health services to children and their parents at the Family Assistance Center set up by Disaster Psychiatry Outreach at Pier 94 in New York City.[5]
Coates was among a small number of psychiatrists and psychologists who were instrumental in establishing a pathologizing and reparative approach to childhood gender non-conformity.[2] Coates considered gender non-conforming children to be suffering from a severe mental disorder.[6] Coates and Kenneth Zucker described the mothers of feminine boys as being overbearing, and transferring unresolved psychological trauma to their children.[7] Coates described the mothers as anxious, controlling, and intrusive.[2] In this psychoanalytic model, the child experiences separation anxiety, and creates a fantasy of reuniting with the mother who was physically or emotionally absent.[7] These ideas echoed early theories on homosexuality that blamed mothers for the gender non-conformity of their children.[7]
Coates served on the American Psychiatric Association DSM-IV Subcommittee on Gender Identity Disorders.[8]
Coates provided therapy to Ronan Farrow between 1990 and 1992.[9][10] In 1993, in relation to the Woody Allen sexual abuse allegation, Coates testified in court that the behavior of Mia Farrow had become increasingly erratic.[11].
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