|
|
- NEWSLETTERS
- MOBILE APPS
-
ADD TIME NEWS
A Mother No More
The Yates children had big blooming smiles, the comprehensive kind that somehow manage to showcase every tooth. That was their mother's smile, judging from the family photo her husband showed the media last Thursday.
A very different Andrea Yates stares from her police snapshot. This woman, 36, looks sapped of life and utterly sad. That, her husband insists, is not the Andrea he knows. That's not the Andrea who made little coupon books, with coupons redeemable for hugs, for each child on Valentine's Day. But that is the Andrea who apparently drowned all five of their children last Wednesday. She was, Russell Yates says, a woman racked by severe postpartum depression.
It was her second bout with the illness. Following the birth of her fourth child, in 1999, Andrea, a former nurse, was hospitalized after swallowing pills in a suicide attempt. Her husband claimed that she recovered with medication. Last November she gave birth to a fifth child and seemed O.K. But in March Andrea's father died, and she began to act "withdrawn" and "robotic," Russell says. She went back on anti-depressants and antipsychotics but didn't respond as well as she had before. She was functioning, Russell says, at "maybe 65%" and struggled to continue homeschooling her kids. Russell's mother began coming by each day to help out.
Around 9 a.m. Wednesday, Russell, also 36, left the family's tidy house in Clear Lake, a Houston suburb, for his job as a NASA computer engineer. Less than an hour later, Andrea drowned 2-year-old Luke in the bathtub, according to a police investigator familiar with her taped confession who spoke anonymously to local newspapers. By the investigator's account, Andrea then put the boy's body on a bed, under a sheet, and repeated the process with Paul, 3, and John, 5. While she was drowning six-month-old Mary, Noah, 7, walked in. When he tried to run, Andrea allegedly dragged him back to meet his siblings' fate. When all the children were gone, she dialed 911. Next, she called Russell and told him to come home. Unnerved by her somber tone, Russell called back to ask if anyone was hurt. "'Yes...the children,'" he said she replied. "'All of them.'"
Most mothers know something of the mental slipperiness that can come with a new baby. Up to three-quarters of them experience some mild form of postpartum "blues"--a sense of anxiety and defeat that usually fades in a few days. About 10% to 15% experience actual depression. But in 1 of every 1,000 births, the mother develops what is called postpartum psychosis, in which she breaks from reality, in rare cases becoming violent. Andrea told police she first thought of killing her children months before, convinced that she was a bad mother who had permanently damaged them, according to the Dallas Morning News.
Among the questions that linger: Why did Andrea reportedly go off antipsychotic medication weeks before the tragedy? And having already endured one harrowing postpartum episode, why did she have another child? Andrea had been prescribed Haldol, an antipsychotic, after the birth of her fourth child. "If she were indeed psychotic [then], she should not have gotten pregnant again," argues Dr. Viven Burt, a psychiatrist at UCLA. Women who have once endured postpartum depression risk a 50% chance of recurrence.
- 1
- 2
- NEXT PAGE »
Most Popular »
- Israel vs. Hizballah: Drumbeats of War
- U.S. Companies Shut Out as Iraq Auctions Its Oil Fields
- The Pentagon Prepares for a Missile Attack from 'Iran'
- Autism Numbers Are Rising. The Question is Why?
- How Las Vegas' Opulent CityCenter Survived Dubai
- Study: TV May Perpetuate Race Bias
- The Young Victoria: How a Queen Shapes Her Destiny
- And the Decade Goes To ...
- Avatar Arrives! Can James Cameron Be King Again?
- Tech Guide
- U.S. Companies Shut Out as Iraq Auctions Its Oil Fields
- Autism Numbers Are Rising. The Question is Why?
- How Las Vegas' Opulent CityCenter Survived Dubai
- Detroit's Last White City Council Member
- Study: TV May Perpetuate Race Bias
- New Evidence That Early Therapy Helps Autistic Kids
- Parents' Sex Talk with Kids: Too Little, Too Late
- America's Most Wanted Teenage Bandit
- Corliss Appraises Avatar: A World of Wonder
- The Young Victoria: How a Queen Shapes Her Destiny





RSS