Friday, October 04, 2013

I stated years ago, on this blog after I had done research when the Texas children were murdered by their mother, it is hormone levels that need to be addressed in Postpartum Depression and Psychosis. I still believe that and while some depression is handled well with medications, Postpartum depression is more hormone related.


...Carey (click here) lost her job as a dental hygienist last year after patients complained that 

her treatment was too rough. And a recent court case hinted that she may 

have fallen on hard times.

The condo association of the building where she lived, Woodside Green 

Association, sued Carey in December.

Court documents were not immediately available, but the New Haven Register 

reported the suit related to unpaid fees on her condo.

Carey reportedly took a $237,616 mortgage on the condo in September 2009 

and, according to the newspaper, had allegedly failed to pay fees in their 

entirety since August 2010. The condo board said she also owed an additional 

$1,759.

The matter was settled Feb. 1....

Miriam Carey was in trouble and she didn't have a sufficient support system to CURE her from her depression. Postpartum depression has proven to be curable in nearly all cases when hormone treatment is applied to increase the opportunity to wellness. There will be patients with co-diagnosis with residual effects that need to be managed medically, but, hormone balance in the case of these women has proven to be successful, even more so than traditional medicines. 

Now we have an incident where a woman didn't have to die and I still question that outcome and an infant without a mother.


By Ann Hepperman'
August 14, 2011 6:34 AM

Maria Bruno knew something (click here) was really wrong when she put her newborn son, Nicolas, down for a nap and then was too afraid to pick him up.

"I was experiencing anger and rage, and I had suicidal thoughts," she says. 
In her desperation, she called her midwife and said, "'I don't know what's wrong, but I can't take care of the baby, and I'm miserable all of the time.'"

Her midwife asked what was wrong. Did she have thoughts of hurting herself? "I just laughed," Bruno says. "I said, 'All the time.'"

After childbirth, most new moms will experience some form of the "baby blues." For some women, those feelings persist and turn into postpartum depression – a serious condition that can lead to hospitalization and more.

On Monday, a University of North Carolina hospital in Chapel Hill will open the country's first free-standing perinatal psychiatry unit. It's hoped the new clinic and those that follow may prevent Bruno's experience from happening to other mothers....