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AsherMeadow, in
association with Amazon.com, brings you a complete list of MSP
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The AsherMeadow
Bookstore contains two pages, our Recommended
Reading List and Other Books &
Publications. The Recommended Reading List includes titles
endorsed by either AsherMeadow or our readers. Other titles
which include MSP-related information are listed on our Other
Books & Publications Page.
Cruel Deception: A Mother's Deadly Game, a
Prosecutor's Crusade for Justiceby Gregg Olsen
In and out of hospitals since birth, angelic
nine-month-old Morgan Reid finally succumbed to what
appeared to be Sudden Infant Death Syndrome. Morgan's
Texas-born mother Tanya, a nurse and devoted wife,
pulled up stakes with her grieving husband Jim, and
moved on. It was the best way to put the past behind
them. Until their son Michael, a boy who by all accounts
was terrified of his mother, began showing signs of the
same affliction that stole the life of his baby
sister...
First, the suspicion: Munchausen Syndrome by Proxy.
Then, Tanya was charged and convicted with felony child
abuse of her son. She was later tried and ultimately
convicted for first degree murder of Morgan. It would
become a landmark trial that unfolded in a series of
reversals and bizarre twists of fate as it gradually
revealed another side of Tanya Reid-of her own troubling
childhood and the dark secrets that drove a woman to the
cruelest deception of all...
More than It Hurts You
by Darin Strauss Now
Available
Munchausen
by Proxy: Identification, Intervention, and Case Managementby Louisa Lasher & Mary
Sheridan; 364 pages; Haworth Maltreatment & Trauma Press;
Available in Hardback and Paperback.
A
distressing look into how far will some people go to get
attention. Through detailed case studies and analysis, the
authors take readers into the lives and minds of people
whose obsessive craving for attention compels them to fake
illness, sometimes to the point of death.
After a childhood spent
being X-rayed, medicated and operated on - in search of an
illness that existed only in her mother's mind - the author
is able to share a personal story of hope.
From the Back
Cover
"This story of unfathomable child abuse is told with
remarkable wit, compassion, and courage. It's a work of
beauty from a beast of a childhood." - Augusten Burroughs,
author of
Running With Scissors and
Dry
Ethical
Conflicts in Psychology by Donald N. Bersoff (Editor)
Paperback 2nd
edition (August 1999)
From Book News, Inc: Following
a review of sanctioned ethics codes and procedural
guidelines of the American Psychological Association, ten
chapters focus on substantive issues in ethics for
scientists, practitioners, and academicians alike. Topics
addressed range from how ethics are best learned and
integrated to such issues as confidentiality, privilege, and
privacy; multiple relationships; assessment; research,
teaching, and supervision; forensics; and the business of
practice. Each chapter is structured around relevant
articles from the psychological literature, and is
introduced by editor Bersoff.
A
thorough critique of the rare diagnosis "Munchausen's
Syndrome by Proxy" (MSBP) and the way in which it has been
employed by medical, mental health and child protective
professionals.
Munchausen
Syndrome by Proxy describes the deliberate harming by
parents of their children in order to get attention. Many
families are separated after its diagnosis. But does MSBP
exist, or is it a product of our imagination, creating MSBP
as the 'trendy' disorder of our time? Investigative reporter
McGill traces the history of MSBP, and examines high profile
cases from the USA. Do No Harm also asks what can be done to
protect parents from being falsely accused.
Provides
suggestions and guidelines for reporting cases of suspected
mistreatment of children, now mandated in all 50 states by
human services professionals such as psychologists, social
workers, teachers, and psychiatrists. For students and
practitioners, weaves together research findings, ethical
debates, and current policies, drawing on examples of both
reported and unreported cases. Includes a glossary without
pronunciation. Annotation copyright Book News, Inc.
Portland, Or.
The
Body Farm by Patricia Daniels Cornwell Paperback - 351
pages Reprint Edition (August 1995) Berkley
Pub Group; ISBN: 0425147622 (Fiction)
New
York Times best-selling author Patricia Cornwell brings back
Kay Scarpetta, consulting forensic pathologist for the FBI's
Behavioral Science Unit, in her grittiest and most
compelling novel. In rural North Carolina, the brutal murder
of eleven-year-old Emily Steiner has shaken a small town.
But more disturbing are the details of the crimes,
chillingly reminiscent of the handiwork of a serial killer
who has eluded the unit for years. Into this volatile
atmosphere comes Scarpetta's ingenious, rebellious niece
Lucy, an FBI intern with a promising future in Quantico's
computer engineering facility--until she is accused of a
shocking security violation. While coming to terms with
Lucy, Kay must conduct a grisly forensic investigation at a
clandestine research facility in Tennessee known as the Body
Farm. There she will find more answers to Emily Steiner's
murder--and evidence that paints a picture of a crime more
horrifying than she imagined.
Nearer
Than the Sky by T. Greenwood Hardcover
- 288 pages 1 Us Ed edition (August 2000)
St Martins
Press (Trade); ISBN: 0312265034 (Fiction)
Read
a complete review and interview with the author on
msp
magazine.
Munchausen
Syndrome by Proxy Abuse: A Practical Approachby
Mary Eminson (Editor), D. Mary Eminson (Editor), R. J.
Postlethwaite
Paperback - 321 pages
1st edition (January 15, 2000) Butterworth-Heinemann
Medical; ISBN: 0750640723
"Kafka's
syndrome" might more aptly describe the elaborate,
arguably unconsciously-rooted staging of illness
characterizing Munchausen syndrome by proxy abuse. In 14
papers, one US and 17 UK health and legal experts explore
the psychiatric, moral, case assessment, management, and
child protection issues raised by MSBP, in which parents or
other caretakers induce a fictitious illness in a child by
physical abuse or a story of symptoms leading health
professionals to believe the child has an illness. Emison is
a consulting child and adolescent psychiatrist for UK
hospitals, and Poslethwaite consults in pediatric nephrology
at Manchester Children's Hospital. Book News, Inc.®,
Portland, OR (From Book News, Inc.)
This
book reviews the current state of knowledge of MSP. Two main
areas are covered, which will be of particular interest: new
directions in research, and treatment of the perpetrator in
and outside the family. The book also considers the ethical
and legal issues raised by this problematic behavior, which
involves many different types of professionals and has a
heavy cost not only for services but also for victims and
perpetrators.
Unlike other books,
this volume provides a multidisciplinary perspective, with
input from social workers, pediatricians,
child-psychiatrists and lawyers, among others. It also
offers an international perspective, with contributors from
the USA, Canada and Australia.
It
is essential for anyone involved in the investigation and
prosecution of child abuse cases to be aware of the often
hidden and subtle warning signs of Munchausen by Proxy.
Munchausen syndrome, classified as a mental illness, occurs
when a person inflicts or fabricates illness upon
themselves, often as an attention-getting device. Munchausen
by Proxy (MBP) is an even more insidious disorder in that
such illness or injury is inflicted upon a victim—usually
a child.
How
far will some people go to get attention? In compelling
cases that read like medical detective stories, the authors
take readers into the lives and minds of people whose
craving for attention compels them to fake illness,
sometimes to the point of death.
The
Spectrum of Factitious Disorders The New
England Journal of Medicine - December 26, 1996, Volume 335,
Number 26, Edited by Marc Feldman and Stuart Eisendrath.
229pp. Washington, D.C., American Psychiatric Press,
1996 / ISBN 0-88048-909-X
A
rule of thumb in forensics: one dead baby is Sudden Infant
Death Syndrome(SIDS); two dead babies is suspicious; three
dead babies is murder. The Death of Innocents starts
off a bit slow, but as soon as a new district attorney
decides to pursue an old case of five siblings whose
deaths were attributed to SIDS, the story kicks into high
gear. There are two villains: the quietly furious mother who
admitted to smothering her children--one of whom was 2 years
old, and kicked and flailed as he died--and the arrogant
medical researcher who was so eager to make a name for
himself that he was willfully blind to the warnings of
danger. Richard Firstman and Jamie Talan, a husband-wife
team, write about abuse of the scientific method as
suspensefully as they write about parental abuse of babies. The
Death of Innocents was named a 1997 Notable Book of the
Year by the New York Times. The NYT writes, The
Death of Innocents "...seamlessly weaves the tales
of the earlier and later murder cases, separated by two
decades, with the complicated scientific and social issues,
the many disparate personalities, documents, interviews and
dramatic moments. The book is paced like a thriller, and it
will be read like one." True
Crime Editor's
Recommended Book, 01/01/98