According to the American Psychological Association, up to 1 in 7 women develop postpartum depression after giving birth (American Psychological Association, 2017). Mothers with the disorder exhibit several symptoms, including “extreme sadness, despair, tearfulness, insomnia, anxiety, intrusive thoughts, compulsions, panic attacks, feelings of inability to cope, and suicidal thoughts” (Comer, 2015, p. 221). Consequently, many psychological researchers assume that the distress and dysfunction caused by postpartum depression may have an impact on the children of women affected; one such impact could be a rise in the rates of corporal punishment of these children. In “History of Postpartum Depression and the Odds of Maternal Corporal Punishment”…