Porque
pais ou guardiões são capazes de matar filhos sob sua
tutela.
“Filicide”
(termo em inglês, que se refere ao assassinato de
criança/adolescente entre 1 e 18 anos. Cometido por genitor,
guardião, padastro/madrasta . Difere do infanticídio
ou “neonaticide”, quando a vítima possui, respectivamente,
menos de 1 ano de idade ou poucas horas de vida.
Neste
breve texto, a reportagem da CNN se vale de conclusões da Dra.
SARA G. WEST (Professora assistente da “Case Western Reserve
University School of Medicine” que estuda o tema há alguns
anos.
Editor's note:
Sara G. West is an assistant professor of psychiatry at Case
Western Reserve University School of Medicine. The opinions
expressed in this commentary are solely those of the author.
(CNN) -- In 2001, the
nation watched as Andrea Yates, by all accounts a loving mother, was
arrested in the killings of her five children after drowning them in
a bathtub. In the trial that followed, we learned she had a history
of mental illness, which intensified in her postpartum periods and
required four psychiatric hospitalizations. She would ultimately be
found not guilty by reason of insanity and sent to a Texas
psychiatric hospital.
Her case riveted a bewildered nation
for much the same reasons as the story this past weekend of Megan
Huntsman, a woman in Utah who authorities say admitted to
strangling or suffocating at least six of her
babies, likely over a 10-year period beginning in 1996, and putting
their bodies in boxes in her garage.
As with Yates, intense national
publicity has focused on the shock or horror of filicide -- the act
of a parent killing a child. We wonder: What would cause a mother or
father to do such a seemingly unnatural thing?
Indeed, it's rare enough to stop us in
our tracks. But the practice has existed since ancient times, and the
reasons may include displeasure over the child's gender, or a
disability or questionable paternity as a lack of parental resources
to care for the child. Filicide has been documented in literature
from all eras. Perhaps the most famous tale comes from Greek
mythology --- the story of Medea, a woman who kills her sons to
punish her husband for his affair.
Today, roughly two-thirds of all
children murdered in the United States under the age of 5 between
1980 and 2008 were killed by a parent, more specifically
33% were killed by their fathers and 30% by their mothers. We
cannot know what was behind the deaths of Huntsman's infants, but
research may offer at least broad motivations.
Forensic psychiatrist Phillip J.
Resnick, a pioneer in the field of filicide research, published a
seminal article in 1969 identifying five major reasons for filicide
based on the motive of the perpetrator:
1. Altruism: The
parent kills the child because he or she may perceive it to be in the
child's best interest. It may be reality-based (e.g., the child
suffers from a terminal illness) or precede the suicide of the
parent, as the parent feels it would be unfair to leave the child
behind to face the cruel world.
2. Acute psychosis: The
parent kills the child based on ideas that are inconsistent with
reality; for example, the parent believes the child has been
possessed by the devil.
3. Unwanted child: The
parent kills the child that he or she regards as a hindrance.
4. Accidental: The
child's death is an unintentional outcome of parental physical abuse.
5. Spousal revenge: The
parent kills the child in an effort to exact revenge on the other
parent.
Filicide is the broad term used to
refer to a parent (or a person acting in a parental role, such as a
stepparent or guardian) who kills his or her child under the age of
18; infanticide is the term used to define the murder of a child in
the first year of life, and -- more specifically -- neonaticide
refers to a parent who kills a child within the first 24 hours of
life.
Neonaticides, as described by Resnick,
are most often perpetrated by young, unmarried women who do not
suffer from a major mental illness and do not want their children. In
1997, for example, New
Jersey teen Melissa Drexler made national news when it was
discovered she gave birth in a bathroom stall at her prom and
disposed of the newborn in a trash can.
It is also worth noting there are
differences between fathers and mothers who commit filicide. Fathers
are more likely to kill more than one victim, including other
children and spouses. They are also more likely to kill themselves
following the filicide. And fathers are often more harshly punished
than women who commit similar crimes.
England, for example, passed the
Infanticide Acts of 1922 and 1938, which banned the use of the death
penalty for mothers who killed their children in the first 12 months
of life. These were efforts to recognize the effect that the birth
and care of an infant may have on the mother. Several other Western
countries have followed suit (with the exception of the United
States). No such laws exist to protect men charged with infanticide.
Is it possible to prevent the killing
of children by their parents? This is trickier.
Efforts to head off deaths have
included the passage of safe haven laws, which allow parents to
surrender infants anonymously to state custody without fear of legal
repercussions. But parents who kill their children are a varied
population, and this, unfortunately, leaves few means to identify
those at risk in the first place.
The friends and family of parents or
parents-to-be suffering from stress or mental illness would best
serve their loved ones by helping them get the attention of mental
health providers. These treatment providers should in turn make every
extra effort to learn specifically about the parents' feelings toward
-- or plans for -- their children.
Then, perhaps, we can have some hope of
preventing these senseless tragedies.
In:
http://edition.cnn.com/2014/04/16/opinion/west-utah-mother/index.html?hpt=hp_c3
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