Some research also suggests that women who kill their children are more
likely to be found mentally ill when compared to any other group who have
murdered children.  One reason is that people automatically assume that
these women must be severely disturbed in order to commit such a crime.
Also, regarding young girls who claim that they didn't know they were
pregnant until the time of birth, many of these girls knew enough to hide
their pregnancy from others, suggesting that they did indeed know of their
condition.
----- Original Message -----
From: "James Guinee" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Teaching in the Psychological Sciences" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Friday, February 22, 2002 10:32 AM
Subject: Psychosis in mothers who murder


> This is LONG, but thought some of you might find it interesting (and
possibly
> useful).
>
> Jim Guinee
>
> ------- Forwarded message follows -------
>
> Delusions, Despair May Torment Mentally Ill Mothers Who Murder
> Knight Ridder/Tribune - February 21, 2002 The Dallas Morning News
> (KRT)
>
> DALLAS-A good mother swaddles her child in a sturdy weave of love and
care.
> But mothers with severe mental illness might offer only a threadbare
cover.
>
> Frayed by psychosis or a profound depression, the fabric of these mothers'
> minds can, in rare instances, leave their babes dangerously exposed. Such
> women often struggle mightily to be good mothers, research suggests. And
in
> many ways, they would succeed - if they didn't kill their children.
>
> Motherhood is considered a sacred duty. So last June, when Andrea Pia
Yates
> drowned little Noah, John, Paul, Luke and Mary, people wondered exactly
what
> evil had possessed her.
>
> For any individual, science can't answer that question. But scientific
> studies can help define differences among mothers who kill. In fact,
research
> dating back three decades has outlined several categories of such mothers,
> with some overlap.
>
> "Women who kill their children as a group are going to be just as
disparate
> as any other population," says Carol Holden, a forensic psychologist and
> researcher at the University of Michigan.
>
> Some mothers fatally beat their children but don't mean to kill them.
Mothers
> also kill to spare a child some real or imagined suffering. They kill for
> revenge on their partners. They kill children they no longer want - or
didn't
> want to begin with.
>
> "You have everyone from a terrified 13-year-old who doesn't even realize
> she's going to give birth and doesn't know what to do and smothers the
> newborn, to someone who cold-heartedly decides children are too much
> trouble," Holden says.
>
> Mothers also kill because their minds have wrung reality into a bizarre
new
> form. Such killings, and the women who commit them, tend to be distinct
from
> the others, psychological studies show.
>
> Overall, "these mentally ill mothers look quite different than the
> non-mentally ill mothers," Holden says. On the other hand, "that's not to
say
> that anyone who looks like that is definitely mentally ill."
>
> Statistics on child murders in the United States show just how vulnerable
the
> youngest children are. Among preschoolers, the younger the child, the
greater
> the risk of being a homicide victim.
>
> Victims of filicide - the term used when a parent kills a child - also
tend
> to be very young. Of the U.S. children in one maternal filicide study, "we
> didn't find a single child killed who was over age 12, and almost all of
> them - 85 percent - were under age 5," says forensic psychologist Geoffrey
> McKee.
>
> Matching threads weave through much of the research on filicidal mothers.
> Compared with other such mothers, those who are severely disturbed are
more
> likely to be older. They are more likely to be married. They tend not to
> conceal their act. They more often try to kill themselves at the same
time.
> And they are more likely than other such mothers - who kill during abuse
or
> moments after childbirth - to murder more than one child.
>
> Such threads connect even mothers of different nations - at least in some
> English-speaking cultures, says McKee, a clinical professor at the
University
> of South Carolina School of Medicine. He and colleague Steven Shea have
> compared 20 U.S. women accused of killing their children with earlier
studies
> of such women from Britain, Canada and a multinational sample.
>
> The women in the U.S. group had been referred to a psychiatric hospital
for
> pretrial evaluation, and thus were more likely to be mentally ill than,
say,
> the broader group of women in the English study. Still, the research noted
a
> "consistency of characteristics across countries."
>
> The cross-cultural comparison suggests that women who kill their children
> typically "are nonaddicted, married, low-income, mentally ill, new or
recent
> mothers under 30 who, acting alone and without weapons, kill only one of
> their children, likely of preschool age," the scientists wrote.
>
> "In our study, only 15 percent had more than one victim," McKee says.
> "However, when there is more than one child who's killed, typically all
the
> children are killed."
>
> In his clinical and research experience, he adds, "if there are multiple
> children who die, the mother is mentally ill."
>
> ---
>
> Holden and her colleagues have detected similar strands. They studied 28
> Michigan women who had pursued the insanity defense for killing their
> children. Eight of the women had been held criminally responsible for
their
> killings; 20 had been found not guilty by reason of insanity.
>
> Those in the latter group were more likely to have had a history of
> psychiatric illness, and less likely to have held a job - "which is a good
> measure of "adjustment" psychologically, Holden notes.
>
> Among those found not guilty by reason of insanity, 60 percent had been
> diagnosed with schizophrenia (a brain disorder characterized by strange
> thinking, feelings and behavior) and 35 percent with a mood disorder -
most
> often severe depression with psychotic symptoms.
>
> A history of suicide attempts, psychiatric hospitalizations and being
abused
> is not uncommon. "When we're talking about mentally ill mothers, we're
> talking not just of psychotic mothers," McKee says, but also mothers with
a
> history of major depression or clinical depression.
>
> Severity of illness is a crucial distinction, notes Dr. Josephine Stanton,
a
> New Zealand clinical psychiatrist. Stanton and colleagues have conducted
> detailed interviews with six mentally ill mothers who killed their
children.
> Most of her subjects had schizophrenia or schizo-affective disorder
> (schizophrenia symptoms accompanied by a major depression or manic
episode).
> One had major depression and anxiety.
>
> Thirty percent of people have some sort of mental disorder, Stanton says,
but
> illness that severe occurs in only about 1 percent. "So we're not talking
> about someone with a mild depression."
>
> Scientists are instead talking about someone who probably has
hallucinations
> (imaginary sensory perceptions) or delusions (false, irrational beliefs).
> Among women acquitted for reasons of insanity in Holden's study,
> hallucinations and delusions were common.
>
> The delusions included such notions as the child "was defective or
monstrous,
> possessed by Satan - something is seriously wrong with them," Holden says.
> "Or there was some sort of delusional disaster that was going to befall
the
> children, and the mothers were saving them."
>
> For the mothers hobbled by depression and psychosis, she says, the
delusions
> "were very much in line with depression - these horrible senses of what
was
> going to happen."
>
> The mothers Stanton studied also had stitched crazy quilts of false ideas.
> For one set of mothers, wild fantasy governed decision-making. One woman
had
> persecutory delusions "where a whole group of people were running her
life,"
> Stanton says. "According to her delusions she had to do all sorts of
things
> to save the world, and she couldn't." She also couldn't leave her child
> behind.
>
> For the other mothers, "life was absolutely terrible and they couldn't
leave
> their children in such an awful world," Stanton says. "It's not bizarre,
but
> the intensity of it is delusional."
>
> Suicidal mothers may decide to kill so their children won't have to grow
up
> without a mother, McKee says. Psychotic mothers may be trying to save a
child
> from a lifetime of psychosis.
>
> "So they have a very altruistic reason for killing their child, even
though
> it's pure delusion," he says. In their minds, they are good mothers.
>
> And by some measures, they can be good mothers.
>
> "Most are women who really care a lot about being mothers," Stanton, of
the
> University of Auckland, found. "It's very important to them ... and I
think
> that's partly why, when they develop the illness, the delusional stuff
tends
> to relate to their children."
>
> Some of the women showed Stanton pictures of their children and talked of
> them lovingly. One of the mothers spoke of feeling guilty because she had
> carted her daughter around shopping. Another described mincing steak
herself,
> rather than buying mince that would have contained ingredients other than
> beef.
>
> "They would take a lot of trouble to make sure things were done really
well,"
> says Stanton. "I think in some ways that increased the burden of parenting
> for them; it was harder because they thought they had to be perfect."
>
> Other burdens can consume anyone with a grave mental illness.
>
> Certainly for the mothers who are psychotic, says McKee, mental
distortions
> disrupt sleep and intrude on the ability to think.
>
> "Delusions and hallucinations are very emotionally draining, especially if
> these are new-onset symptoms" - such as those that, in rare cases, arise
just
> after childbirth. For some, the symptoms persist, evolving into a more
> chronic psychosis, such as schizophrenia.
>
> Some women experience severe depression after the birth of one child but
not
> another, Holden says. Others suffer depression or psychosis after each
child
> is born. The biological swing that can follow childbirth could cause
anything
> from a mild case of the blues in a number of women, to serious depression
in
> a smaller group, and psychosis in a fraction.
>
> Many recent mothers who develop mental problems aren't sure how to mend
their
> minds. "There are lots of women who don't seek treatment," Holden says,
> "because they get told everybody gets the blues."
>
> Meanwhile, routine pressures mount. "Someone who's been mentally ill for a
> while is going to have the difficulties that go along with mental
illness -
> impaired social and work relationships," Holden says. It's hard to relate
to
> people whose reality is distorted, adds Stanton, because their behavior
can
> be so odd. "They're quite difficult to get close to."
>
> Each individual case of filicide, however, is not cut from the same cloth.
> "That's part of the reason why (scientists) are looking for
> commonalities," Holden says.
>
> Among the mothers with severe mental illness, the decision to kill a child
> can arise abruptly. But then, so can the mental problems.
>
> In Stanton's interviews, some women, draped with depression, had
contemplated
> the killing for perhaps a week. For the others, blanketed in psychosis,
the
> murder was an impulse.
>
> But something had definitely snapped.
>
> "They all had either a new illness that nobody knew about or their
> illness changed," Dr. Stanton says. "When you listen to these stories you
can
> hear that they had signs and symptoms of illness, but they hadn't been
> recognized."
>
> Among the symptoms: Thought becomes disorganized. Emotions may disappear -
or
> escalate irrationally. Impulses are hard to control. Consequences aren't
> clear.
>
> "It makes people in that state very, very difficult to relate to and to
have
> an idea of what's going on," Stanton says.
>
> Despite the erratic nature of the illnesses, her research team was
surprised
> at the mothers' lack of premeditation. Especially among the psychotic
women,
> she says, the killing was more the result of disorganized thinking.
>
> "I think that's the reality of the risk," she says. "When you have someone
> who's actively psychotic, they can do anything."
>
> After the mother's arrest, treatment begins in earnest. And a tapestry of
> realization, despair and agony unfolds.
>
> For the psychotic mothers, as delusions and hallucinations are tamed, a
deep
> and lasting depression can ensue - one that stems from both the declining
> symptoms and a growing grasp of the horror of the crime, McKee says.
>
> Remorse is great and suicide is a risk. When the psychotic reasoning
> subsides, Holden says, "they're left with the fact that they killed their
> children."
>
> Furthermore, says McKee, "often they're not viewed very sympathetically by
> others. I've found few mothers or fathers who have much sympathy for a
> mother who kills her children."
>
> ---
>
> Experts are working to figure out just which mothers might someday kill
their
> children - and how to get their mental illness treated.
>
> Disturbed mothers may be contemplating killing themselves, says Stanton,
"but
> suicide ideation is common - and killing children is uncommon. That's one
of
> the reasons it's so difficult to do prevention."
>
> And since the crime is rare, science can't really forecast which ill
mothers
> might murder their child, Holden notes.
>
> Because the few hundred U.S. filicides each year are spread across 50
states,
> just gathering subjects for a study can take a decade, McKee says. During
> that time, there may be changes in how diagnoses are made or how cases are
> prosecuted.
>
> In addition, studies frequently focus on filicidal mothers who are
mentally
> ill because those women are concentrated in psychiatric hospitals where
> researchers work. Other filicidal mothers, in jail or elsewhere, are a
> looser-knit group. Yet stopping fatal child abuse, and preventing
overwrought
> teens from smothering their newborns, could save more lives.
>
> ---
>
> Still, mentally ill mothers often can't keep their troubles under wraps,
> providing some chance for prevention.
>
> McKee cites a report that up to 75 percent of mothers who murdered their
> children had psychiatric symptoms before the killing, and up to 40 percent
> had been seen by a psychiatrist shortly before the killing.
>
> "If a woman with children presents with depression, and with suicidal
> ideation, a question clinicians want to ask this person is, `What are your
> plans for the children?' " he says.
>
> The question, originally posed by another researcher, allows the women to
> discuss their feelings about the children in relation to the suicide -
"and
> perhaps allows them to talk about unthinkable topics, like killing your
> children."
>
> Watching for postpartum mental problems - those that follow childbirth -
also
> deserves more emphasis, McKee says. He cites statistics showing that
> hospitalization for psychosis is 25 times higher among women in the first
30
> days and 14 times higher in the first 90 days after childbirth.
>
> Getting help for mothers before their minds unravel is not easy. In
Stanton's
> interviews, "a number of these women talked about people in their lives
> worrying about them, but the people didn't quite know what to do with
them,"
> she says.
>
> Doctors and others need to work harder. "Sometimes I think it's actually
easy
> to get help to the people who are quite functional and who are able to ask
> and get help," Stanton says. "We need to be more assertive about following
up
> the people who need more help but don't reach out."
>
> Maternal filicide has victims other than the slain children. The family
that
> remains is shattered.
>
> Take the siblings who survive. Researchers know little about them, McKee
> says.
>
> "You can imagine the conflicts that they would have," he says. Rage.
> Depression. Relief. Guilt. They may have witnessed the slaying. And they
may
> miss mom.
>
> The mothers themselves wear a mantle of guilt and grief for years. "When I
> interviewed these women," Stanton recalls, "it was just so painful, still
> incredibly painful for them. It's a terrible thing to have to live with."
>
> ---
>
> SEVERITY
>
> For 1999, the latest year for which statistics were available, 607 U.S.
> children younger than 5 were homicide victims. The younger the child, the
> greater the chance of being killed: 42.2 percent were less than 1 year
old;
> 20.3 percent were 1 year old; 18.5 percent were 2 years old; 12.5 percent
> were 3 years old; 6.4 percent were 4 years old. Among this group, a parent
or
> stepparent is most likely the killer.
>
> Homicides of children younger than 5 (cases 1976-99): 31 percent were
killed
> by fathers; 30 percent were killed by mothers; 23 percent were killed by
> acquaintances; 6 percent were killed by other relatives; 3 percent were
> killed by strangers; 7 percent unknown
>
> SOURCE: Bureau of Justice Statistics
>
> ---
> You are currently subscribed to tips as: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> To unsubscribe send a blank email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]


---
You are currently subscribed to tips as: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To unsubscribe send a blank email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Reply via email to