Telma Reca (8 January 1904 – 16 June 1979), also known as Telma Reca de Acosta, was a pioneer in child and adolescent psychology and psychiatry in Argentina, collaborated in the creation of the psychology career there, and led two divisions of the Department of Hygiene of the Ministry of Social Assistance and Public Health (1937–1948).
Life and work
Reca was born in
San Juan, Argentina
San Juan () is the capital and largest city of the Argentine province of San Juan in the Cuyo region, located in the Tulúm Valley, west of the San Juan River, at above mean sea level, with a population of around 112,000 as per the (over ...
and moved to
Buenos Aires.
[Ramacciotti, K. I. (2018). Telma Reca en la gestión estatal de la sanidad argentina (1930-1948). (in Spanish) ''Asclepio'', ''70''(1), p211.]
Although she showed an early interest in arts and philosophy, she decided to study medicine at
University of Buenos Aires (UBA), graduating as a medical doctor with honors in 1928. Expanding her training through scholarships and awards she was able to study in the United States and carried out studies on juvenile delinquency in 1930. In 1931 she obtained a
Master of Arts at
Vassar College in
Poughkeepsie, New York. Her work there resulted in her thesis ''Juvenile Delinquency in the United States and Argentina'' (1932), with which she obtained her Ph.D. (from UBA) and, in addition, earned the
Eduardo Wilde award.
Returning to Argentina from the United States in 1934, she created the Children's Mental Hygiene office under the Department of Pediatrics at the
Hospital de Clínicas José de San Martín in Buenos Aires. According to one biography:
The office was based on the Child Guidance Clinics that Reca had observed in the U.S. and whose work she was able to study in depth in 1942, this time with the help of a grant from the
Rockefeller Foundation
The Rockefeller Foundation is an American private foundation and philanthropic medical research and arts funding organization based at 420 Fifth Avenue, New York City. The second-oldest major philanthropic institution in America, after the Carneg ...
. From then on the Hygiene Center was called the Center for Psychology and Psychiatry. In particular, she focused her research on the results of psychotherapy in children and adolescents. Reca was a pioneer in implementing child psychopathological assistance at the hospital level.
Her interest in juvenile delinquency led her to earn the title of
Medical Examiner in 1941.
The night of the long canes
After the 1966 military
coup d'état in Argentina, Reca was one of the hundreds of university professors who resigned in opposition to the new government and its intervention in University affairs, which resulted in the violent Night of the Long Canes (
La Noche de los Bastones Largos) on 29 July. Then, because she had resigned from her professorships, Reca was dismissed from the Directorate of the Department of Psychology and Psychopathology of the Hospital de Clínicas. All the members of the department left with her.
In 1967, together with some collaborators, she founded a private institution called the Center for Medical Psychological Studies of Childhood and Adolescence (CEAM).
Reca passed away unexpectedly at work in Buenos Aires on 16 June 1979.
She had just recently received the 1979
Aníbal Ponce
Aníbal Norberto Ponce (6 June 1898 – 18 May 1938), was an Argentine psychologist, sociologist, professor and political activist.
Biography
In his youth, Ponce studied at the Colegio Nacional de Buenos Aires (National College), then at the F ...
Award.
Personal life
Married to the architect Wladimiro de Acosta, they had three children, and she sometimes used the name Telma Reca de Acosta. Her mother, Doña Rita, always lived with the family.
Selected publications
* Reca, T. (1945). Personalidad y conducta del niño. In ''Personalidad y conducta del niño'' (pp. 228–228).
* Reca, T. (1961). Problemas psicopatológicos en pediatría. In ''Problemas psicopatológicos en pediatría'' (pp. 383–383).
* Reca, T. (1963). Psicoterapia en la infancia. In ''Psicoterapia en la infancia'' (pp. 334–334).
* Reca de Acosta, T. (1966). Aspectos psicológicos de los problemas escolares en las" villas miseria". ''Revista de Psicología'', ''3''.
* Reca, T. (1972). La inadaptación escolar.
References
{{DEFAULTSORT:Reca, Telma
1904 births
1979 deaths
Physicians from Buenos Aires
Scientists from Buenos Aires
20th-century Argentine scientists
20th-century Argentine women scientists
20th-century Argentine women
Argentine psychologists
Argentine psychiatrists
Argentine women psychologists
Argentine women psychiatrists
University of Buenos Aires alumni
20th-century psychologists