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Murder, mercury, mental illness: infanticide in nineteenth-century Ireland

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Abstract

Background

Infanticide has been described in almost every human society.

Aims

To present a case of infanticide from nineteenth-century Ireland and explore related diagnostic, therapeutic and judicial issues.

Methods

This paper uses original archival material from the Central Mental Hospital, Dublin to present a case of infanticide and inform an exploration of related issues.

Results

In 1892, ‘Dora’, a thirty-four year old servant from Dublin, was found guilty of the murder of her eight-month old child and sentenced to indefinite detention at the Central Mental Hospital, Ireland’s only inpatient forensic psychiatry facility. The subsequent experiences of Dora (“a case of melancholia”) illustrate many of the diagnostic, therapeutic and judicial issues surrounding infanticide in nineteenth-century Ireland.

Conclusions

There were strong links between social circumstances and infanticide in nineteenth-century Ireland, compounded by myriad diagnostic and therapeutic challenges associated with forensic psychiatric committal and lengthy detention in poorly-therapeutic facilities .

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Acknowledgments

The author is grateful for the assistance of Professor Harry Kennedy (National Forensic Psychiatry Service, Dublin) and for the comments of the anonymous peer-reviewer.

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Correspondence to B. D. Kelly.

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Kelly, B.D. Murder, mercury, mental illness: infanticide in nineteenth-century Ireland. Ir J Med Sci 176, 149–152 (2007). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11845-007-0045-7

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s11845-007-0045-7

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