Moms who Kill The ar tical I read was called Moms who Kill by Mark Levy. I found the ar tical on psychology today. com. In the ar tical it discusses how common and how dangerous postpartum depression really is. Up to 80 percent of new mothers experience some kind of depress on up to one year after giving birth. Known to most as the ‘Baby Blues’ a mild depression that if continues can be come something much more powerful and even more dangerous.
In some women they may experience psychosis, where in some cases they try to kill their children. Contrary to enormous amounts of research, there is still no medical report on what causes the disorder or how it can be treated. ‘Having grown up expecting mother hood to be one of the best times of your life, many women suffer alone, feeling miserable, but unaware that postpartum mood disorder has a name.’ Karen Klieman, M. S. W.
, founder and director of the Postpartum Stress Center in Philadelphia. The baby blues are common to new mothers due to the lack of sleep, the baby’s crying and the shock of motherhood. It’s not awful for a mother to feel irritable, overwhelmed and a lot of the time tearful. These feeling begin to show three or four days after birth, but should only last a few weeks. If the blues last for more the two weeks, then she may be experiencing (PPD) which is postpartum depression. The symptoms of PPD are feelings of despondency, inadequacy as a mother, impaired concentration, or memory loss.
The Essay on Feelings A Child Experiences Parent Book Understand
Benjamin P. Welch Mr. Barnard Psychology 200 December 1, 2004 A simple summary of I'm Ok-You " re Ok will not give the needed credit that the book and its author deserve. It is a book that one must read to fully or even partially understand it's meaning and the author's viewpoint of transactional analysis. The author, Thomas A. Harris M. D. , explains in this book the vast amount of experiences ...
Some women such as Jennifer Moyer become overwhelmed with fear for the baby. In the beginning after Moyer gave birth to her son she felt irritable and experiencing difficulty sleeping. After her six week check up was when things really fell apart for Moyer. She began to have feelings that her son was in danger, that someone or something as trying to hurt him. She be cam hyper protective she wouldnt even allow the boys father to hold him. After three nights her fear consumed her, which led to her baby having to be physical removed from her, and she was forced to the hospital.
Moyer was one of he few who was experiencing psychosis.