{"version":"1.0","type":"rich","provider_name":"Acast","provider_url":"https://acast.com","height":250,"width":700,"html":"<iframe src=\"https://embed.acast.com/$/691d2f15295fc6e848e91a58/6987d3f75ad8bc4f7c00e6e1?\" frameBorder=\"0\" width=\"700\" height=\"250\"></iframe>","title":"Lindsay Clancy: Mental Illness or Murder?","thumbnail_width":200,"thumbnail_height":200,"thumbnail_url":"https://open-images.acast.com/shows/691d2f15295fc6e848e91a58/1770509290740-b1f0206b-2629-4c27-87ba-381d489c0e9a.jpeg?height=200","description":"<p>In this episode, we examine the case of Lindsay Clancy, a labor and delivery nurse accused of killing her three children in January 2023, through a lens rarely centered in true crime: what happens when a postpartum brain, already undergoing massive neurological restructuring, is destabilized by rapid psychiatric medication changes.</p><p>Rather than framing Clancy solely through the tragedy of three children's deaths or questions of guilt and innocence, this episode explores how hormonal crashes, medication-induced side effects, and systemic failures in postpartum mental health care can create catastrophic neurological crises.</p><p>Drawing on research in neurobiology, psychopharmacology, postpartum psychiatry, and medication-induced psychosis, we explore:</p><ul><li>How pregnancy physically restructures the brain and creates windows of extreme vulnerability</li><li>The neurological mechanisms of SSRIs and how they can trigger paradoxical reactions in destabilized brains</li><li>What akathisia is, why it's so dangerous, and why it's rarely recognized or treated</li><li>The difference between postpartum psychosis, medication-induced psychosis, extended suicide, and premeditated murder</li><li>What neuroscience can and cannot explain about criminal responsibility and moral culpability</li></ul><p>This case is currently awaiting trial. Lindsay Clancy is presumed innocent until proven guilty. </p><p><strong>The theories presented here are based on publicly available court documents and scientific literature, not determinations of fact.</strong></p><p>With a background in public health and neuroscience (graduate training at Johns Hopkins),&nbsp;<em>The Murder Mindset</em>prioritizes education, prevention, and understanding over sensationalism, asking harder questions about how we treat maternal mental health, monitor psychiatric medications, and define accountability when brains are in crisis.</p><p>⚠️&nbsp;<strong>Content Warning:</strong>&nbsp;This episode contains discussion of child death, strangulation, suicide attempts, self-harm, postpartum depression, psychosis, and medication side effects. Listener discretion is strongly advised.</p><p>🎧 This episode is for listeners interested in true crime, forensic psychology, neuroscience, maternal mental health, psychopharmacology, and the behavioral science behind tragedy.</p>","author_name":"deardhra mcgeough"}