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The fact that Texas passed a Bill about this particular case tells me most of what I need to know about how the Texas Legislature felt about the case.
True...and maybe that testimony was from an investigator, I forget which...but it was definitely false. And the ends don't justify them means by any stretch...that was a no-brainer to toss out.
The fact that Texas passed a Bill about this particular case tells me most of what I need to know about how the Texas Legislature felt about the case.
<TABLE id=content cellSpacing=0 width=464 border=0><TBODY><TR><TH>Medical Management </TH></TR><TR><TD vAlign=top>Postpartum Depression and House Bill 341
Postpartum depression (PPD) is a serious disorder, each year affecting 10% to 15% of women who have delivered children. This disorder, despite its high prevalence, often goes undetected and untreated. In an attempt to address this public health problem, the State of Texas has enacted legislation, House Bill 341 (also known as the "Andrea Yates Bill"), which went into effect on September 1, 2003. This law requires healthcare providers who treat pregnant women to provide them with resource information regarding counseling for postpartum depression and other emotional traumas associated with pregnancy and parenting.
The purpose of this report is to assist HMO Blue Texas network physicians in meeting the intent of this new legislation by providing resource information on PPD. Additional information is provided on symptoms, assessment, risk factors, and treatment for PPD as well as information on the joint HMO Blue Texas and Magellan Behavioral Health Postpartum Prevention Program.
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The fact that Texas passed a Bill about this particular case tells me most of what I need to know about how the Texas Legislature felt about the case.
<TABLE id=content cellSpacing=0 width=464 border=0><TBODY><TR><TH>Medical Management </TH></TR><TR><TD vAlign=top>Postpartum Depression and House Bill 341
Postpartum depression (PPD) is a serious disorder, each year affecting 10% to 15% of women who have delivered children. This disorder, despite its high prevalence, often goes undetected and untreated. In an attempt to address this public health problem, the State of Texas has enacted legislation, House Bill 341 (also known as the "Andrea Yates Bill"), which went into effect on September 1, 2003. This law requires healthcare providers who treat pregnant women to provide them with resource information regarding counseling for postpartum depression and other emotional traumas associated with pregnancy and parenting.
The purpose of this report is to assist HMO Blue Texas network physicians in meeting the intent of this new legislation by providing resource information on PPD. Additional information is provided on symptoms, assessment, risk factors, and treatment for PPD as well as information on the joint HMO Blue Texas and Magellan Behavioral Health Postpartum Prevention Program.
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Speaking of the Texas legislature, I would be surprised if there aren't a few of them currently drafting some legal measures to get rid of the 'insanity defense' in the state of Texas.
So, Texas passes a PC law in knee-jerk reaction to the acquittal...don't make me look up all the absolutely fucked-up laws on the books in various states.
I hope some 250-pound dyke nurse drowns Yates in a sanitarium bathtub. Actually, I'd like to take her down the the local auto garage, stick the airhose in her uterus, and blow her sorry ass up like a fucking tractor tire...
Anyone familiar with the law will tell you that an insanity defense only works on TV!
Very rarely in real court!
Has anyone in this post ever been exposed to an individual experiencing psychosis??
I have worked in a Psych. hospital for the last 4 1/2 years which gives me a little bit of insight with this matter.
I will start out by agreeing the statement "GUILTY but INSANE".
Until a person actually experiences or visualizes a psychotic individual first hand they should NOT pass judgment or an uneducated opinion. Trust me, none of you have any idea what it is like UNLESS you have spent a significant amount of time around a psychotic person. Everyone agrees that David Berkowits commited some very hanus crimes. But many people can accept the fact that he heard a dog across the street talking to him like the devil wich gave reason for his crimes. Not making them O.K., but understandable from a pychological stand point.
Interacting with a person that is ACTIVELY hallucinating, both visual and/or auditory, gave me an entirely new perspective on the mentally ill. A psychotic individual is absolutely out of control of themselves and their environment. Obviously not everyone who is psychotic experiences the same level of severity, and only about 1% of people with psychosis related illnesses are violent. While a person is psychotic they are totally out of touch with reality. Once the episode is over they sometimes realize what they did and can conceptualize it, but many times it a very unreal experience.
Andrea Yates heard God's voice tell her to kill her children in order to save them, and send them to heaven. This was REALITY to her at that moment in time. She also had a history of postpartum dep. with her other children. If anything she should have taken a responsible approach to the situation by not having anymore children. Unfortunate, yes, but in hindsight this option would have been the most logical.
None of this makes what she did O.K., it merely provides somewhat of an explanation for her way of thinking at the time of this horrific incident.
Do I think she is guilty? YES. Do I think she should be denied treatment and meds. because of this? NO. She will spend the rest of her life in a forensic psych. hospital or prison regardless of what the media reported.
Absolutely spot on.
As much as people now are complaining about judges supposed re-interpreting the law, the system is the best in the world.