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El. knyga: Medication, Mental Illness, and Murder: What Really Killed the Crespi Twins

  • Formatas: EPUB+DRM
  • Išleidimo metai: 18-Mar-2025
  • Leidėjas: Rowman & Littlefield
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781538199305
  • Formatas: EPUB+DRM
  • Išleidimo metai: 18-Mar-2025
  • Leidėjas: Rowman & Littlefield
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781538199305

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"This true story of a 2006 family tragedy takes readers into the heart of psychosis related to SSRI antidepressants"--

While Kim Crespi was getting a haircut, her husband David murdered their five-year-old twin daughters during a game of hide and seek. In the aftermath, family, friends, and even David have more questions than answers.

In 2005, Kim Crespi had what she later described as “the perfect life.” She and her husband, David—a gentle giant of a man, devoutly religious, a loving father, and a proven star in the world of finance—had five healthy, happy children. No one, least of all Kim, ever suspected that the life the Crespis had lovingly woven together could be destroyed in less than forty minutes.

In Medication, Mental Illness, and Murder, author Edward L. Jones III chronicles David Crespi’s struggles with insomnia and depression, the role SSRI antidepressants may have played in the killings, and Kim’s unimaginable journey of trauma, suffering, and eventual forgiveness as documented by her journal entries.

Using letters and other forms of personal communications with David, plus excerpts from scholarly articles and more, Jones takes readers on a journey into the dark heart of psychosis, of North Carolina’s penal and mental health systems, and of Big Pharma.



This true story of a 2006 family tragedy takes readers into the heart of psychosis related to SSRI antidepressants.

Recenzijos

This book will grip and disturb you. You will be forced to grapple with an issue no-one has solvedwhat happens to the intent and premeditation critical to returning a verdict of murder when you are under the influence of a psychotropic drug. -- David Healy, PhD, psychiatrist, author of Pharmageddon and Let Them Eat Prozac Those of us who have worked in the world of music and entertainment media know all too well the importance of treatment centers for addictions to alcohol, cannabis, and opioids. Yet, SSRIs and Benzos might be the most dangerous drugs of all, since they are far too easily prescribed to millions of Americans, even to children. Meticulously researched, profoundly moving, by turns horrifying and edifying, Ed Joness consequential new book is a must-read for parents whose children are growing up in an overprescribed world, and for psychiatrists and physicians who care about their patients long-term mental health. -- Terry Hummel, former publisher, Rolling Stone Magazine I am a longtime Advanced Emergency Medical Technician, and in my experience every word of Ed Joness harrowing book rings true, because I have witnessed firsthand the devastations visited upon families by SSRI antidepressants. Medication, Mental Illness, and Murder should be required reading for every current and future psychiatrist and physicianwith an emphasis on the latter, since nearly two-thirds of antidepressants are prescribed by primary care doctors. Too many medical professionals who should know better are handing these pills out like candy, and police and emergency responders are dealing with the fallout. -- Mary Katherine Lockwood, clinical associate professor emerita, Department of Molecular, Cellular, and Biomedical Sciences, University of New Hampshire; and author of Clinical Correlates in Anatomy and Physiology A heartbreaking story of filicide, the potential risks of powerful antidepressants, and unforgiving justice with respect to crimes involving mental illness. -- Richard Ernsberger Jr., bestselling author and former senior editor of Newsweek Magazine

Daugiau informacijos

This true story of a 2006 family tragedy takes readers into the heart of psychosis related to SSRI antidepressants.
Disclaimer

Prologue

Part I: Inferno: 2006

Chapter One: I Had the Perfect Life.

Chapter Two: I Just Killed My Two Daughters.

Chapter Three: We Will Stand as Advocates for Light.

Chapter Four: God, Where Is My Husband?

Chapter Five: Home Alone

Chapter Six: The Death Sentence for David?

Chapter Seven: Who Was the Real David Crespi?

Chapter Eight: The Road to Damascus

Chapter Nine: The Oprah Winfrey Show Devotes an Hour to the Crespi Case

Part II: Purgatorio: 2007 to 2013

Chapter Ten: The Ties That Bind

Chapter Eleven: Big Pharmas Big Lies: Part One

Chapter Twelve: Withdrawal

Chapter Thirteen: A History of Antidepressants

Chapter Fourteen: A Tale of Two Countries, Part One

Chapter Fifteen: Pills, Lies, and Videotape

Part III: Hoping Against Hope: 2014 to Present

Chapter Sixteen: A Devastating Diagnosis

Chapter Seventeen: Big Pharmas Big Lies, Part Two

Chapter Eighteen: SSRIs, R.I.P.?

Chapter Nineteen: A Tale of Two Countries, Part Two

Chapter Twenty: Still, She Persists: In Holding on to Hope

Afterword: Should SSRIs Be Banned?

Bibliography

Index

About the Author
Edward L. Jones III has been an award-winning writer in two different fields: the Mad Men world of advertising and the (slightly) saner world of higher education.During his ad career, Ed won over 350 awards for creativity. His copywriting work has been featured in several college textbooks.

In his spare time away from advertising, Ed served as a Community Columnist for the Charlotte Observer. One of Eds most well-received columns was about the David Crespi case.

Between 2007 and 2018, Ed was the editor-in-chief and lead feature writer for three different college alumni magazines: Crossroads (Belmont Abbey College), Averett Magazine (Averett University), and Salem College Magazine. Murder by Medication? is Eds first book.