Skip to main content

Archived Comments for: Filicide in Austria and Finland - A register-based study on all filicide cases in Austria and Finland 1995-2005

Back to article

  1. Numerical error

    Virpi Kauko, --

    28 June 2012

    "Austria had 86 filicide victims and Finland had 66, which
    equal 5.2 per 100,000 inhabitants and 5.9 per 100,000
    inhabitants, respectively (Table 2)."

    According to the official vital statistics, there were on average about 1,120,000
    people younger than 18 years in Finland at that 11-year time period. The annual
    filicide rate would thus actually be 66/11 = 6 cases per 1,120,000 people in age
    group 0-17, which equals 0.54 /100,000.

    Unlike the figure 5.9 stated in the article, the figure 0.54 fits quite well into existing
    data. According to reports by the National Research Institute of Legal Policy [*], the
    total annual rates of child homicides in Finland have been less than one per 100,000
    children in the age group 0-14 for many decades (and filicide rate is obviously at most
    that high). I do not think the Austrian figure could be as high as 5.2 /100,000 either.

    In the Discussion section, the authors do notice that their results are surprisingly high
    compared to WHO Mortality Database. They suggest this anomaly is due to the hidden
    nature of these crimes. But, as they correctly note in Methods, "rate of hidden criminality
    for homicide is low in both countries". Even if there were unreported cases, these could
    not have been revealed by this record-based research. The unexpectedly high number
    is most likely due to a simple computational error.


    Sincerely,

    Virpi Kauko, Ph.D in Mathematics
    Jyvaskyla, Finland

    [*] Research Report 258; Table 1 on page 22 of the Finnish full text.

    Competing interests

    None

Advertisement