Chicago Psychoanalytic Institute
Pfeffer Eisin has extensive experience in the field of early childhood mental health and psychotherapy. Currently serving as Director of the DCFS Early Childhood Project at the Erikson Institute since January 2006, Pfeffer Eisin has held multiple roles including Associate Director and Clinical Supervisor, conducting comprehensive assessments of families in the child welfare system and providing recommendations for services. Additionally, Pfeffer Eisin practices as a Psychotherapist at The Chicago Institute for Psychoanalysis since September 2010 and previously worked as a Clinician at the Lutherbrook Child and Adolescent Center, focusing on therapy for children affected by trauma. Pfeffer Eisin holds a Master's degree in Clinical Psychology from the Illinois School of Professional Psychology and a Bachelor's degree in Psychology and English from the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign.
Chicago Psychoanalytic Institute
The Chicago Psychoanalytic Institute transforms the lives of individuals, families and communities using psychoanalytic knowledge to help them grow and thrive. Since its founding in 1932, the Institute has contributed to the field of psychoanalysis through education and scholarship. Today, the Institute offers a contemporary model of psychoanalytic thought relevant to individual and community life that is represented in all its education programs, providing advanced training in the theory and practice of psychoanalysis and psychotherapy. The Institute’s Treatment Centers provide psychoanalytically informed services for children, adolescents and adults. Continuing education and community engagement programs from the Institute bring psychoanalytic ideas to public discussions of cultural and social issues. Psychoanalysis is both a theory of the mind and a method of therapy. As a theory of the mind, psychoanalysis offers a comprehensive, in-depth explanation of being human: why we do what we do; why we want what we desire; and how we become the people we become. As a method of therapy, psychoanalysis explores the individual within the context in which they live. Psychoanalysts and psychoanalytic psychotherapists work in mental health clinics, community agencies, schools and other organizations. They consult with mental health practitioners and also offer consultation to those who work with people in any setting, including neighborhood organizations, corporations, family businesses, lawyers, educators and many others. Human beings and being human are at the core of the Chicago Psychoanalytic Institute’s mission. The Institute is dedicated to advancing the knowledge of human beings – their feelings, thoughts and behaviors – and to improving people’s lives. Visit the Institute’s website www.ChicagoAnalysis.org to learn more.