MsFacetious
What a Kerfuffle...
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- Jun 2, 2010
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I'm getting the impression that post partum psychosis requires the presence of some form of mental illness prior to pregnancy, and that this mental illness is aggravated during hormonal changes that are present during, and after, pregnancy. I think that there are an awful lot of women that would argue against any line of thinking that strictly equates psychosis with pregnancy, or states that women can become psychotic due to childbirth. Women have faught long and hard over the last couple of centuries to have childbirth defined as a normal bodily function; one that is natural and which should not be viewed as necessarily requiring medical intervention, or as something that causes psychotic mental illness.
I do believe that if a woman has a predisposition for psychotic behavior, then something like normal hormonal changes during, and after, childbirth could aggravate the problem.
Women are more at risk of severe mental illness after giving birth than at any other time in their lives.
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The majority of women who have postpartum psychosis will have no family history of mental illness or experience of it themselves, experts say.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-19323695
If you have a family member with PPP or a history of mental health issues yourself, you ARE at higher risk for PPP.
However, the majority of women who actually have PPP do NOT have a history themselves.
We do tend to hear more about the ones who had a history of depression, because they seem so preventable.
PPP can happen to ANYONE. In a matter of a couple of days a woman can go from okay to psychotic. It's terrifying.
I don't believe that the members of Websleuths who dealt with PPP ever mentioned a previous history either.
Andrea Yates is not a typical example. Many people who may have ended up like her just stopped having babies. :twocents: