PLoS ONE (Jan 2013)

Incidence and risk factors of homicide-suicide in Swiss households: National Cohort study.

  • Radoslaw Panczak,
  • Marcel Zwahlen,
  • Adrian Spoerri,
  • Kali Tal,
  • Martin Killias,
  • Matthias Egger,
  • Swiss National Cohort

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0053714
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 1
p. e53714

Abstract

Read online

BackgroundHomicide-suicides are rare but catastrophic events. This study examined the epidemiology of homicide-suicide in Switzerland.MethodsThe study identified homicide-suicide events 1991-2008 in persons from the same household in the Swiss National Cohort, which links census and mortality records. The analysis examined the association of the risk of dying in a homicide-suicide event with socio-demographic variables, measured at the individual-level, household composition variables and area-level variables. Proportional hazards regression models were calculated for male perpetrators and female victims. Results are presented as age-adjusted hazard ratios (HR) with 95% confidence intervals (95%CI).ResultsThe study identified 158 deaths from homicide-suicide events, including 85 murder victims (62 women, 4 men, 19 children and adolescents) and 68 male and 5 female perpetrators. The incidence was 3 events per million households and year. Firearms were the most prominent method for both homicides and suicides. The risk of perpetrating homicide-suicide was higher in divorced than in married men (HR 3.64; 95%CI 1.56-8.49), in foreigners without permanent residency compared to Swiss citizens (HR 3.95; 1.52-10.2), higher in men without religious affiliations than in Catholics (HR 2.23; 1.14-4.36) and higher in crowded households (HR 4.85; 1.72-13.6 comparing ≥2 with ConclusionsThis national longitudinal study shows that living conditions associated with psychological stress and lower levels of social support are associated with homicide-suicide events in Switzerland.