Brucato Gary, Hesson Hannah, Dishy Gabriella, Lee Kathryn, Pia Tyler, Syed Faizan, Villalobos Alexandra, Rogers R Tyler, Corbeil Thomas, Stone Michael H, Lieberman Jeffrey A, Appelbaum Paul S, Girgis Ragy R
New York State Psychiatric Institute, 1051 Riverside Drive, Unit 31, New York, N.Y., 10032.
Columbia University Irving Medical Center, Department of Psychiatry, 1051 Riverside Drive, Unit 31, New York, N.Y., 10032.
J Forens Psychiatry Psychol. 2023;34(2):261-274. doi: 10.1080/14789949.2023.2208570. Epub 2023 May 2.
Mass murder, particularly mass shootings, constitutes a major, growing public health concern. Specific motivations for these acts are not well understood, often overattributed to severe mental illness. Identifying diverse factors motivating mass murders may facilitate prevention. We examined 1,725 global mass murders from 1900-2019, publicly described in English in print or online. We empirically categorized each into one of ten categories reflecting reported primary motivating factors, which were analyzed across mass murderers generally, as well as between U.S- and non-U.S.-based mass-shooters. Psychosis or disorganization related to mental illness were infrequently motivational factors (166; 9.6%), and were significantly more associated with mass murder committed using methods other than firearms. The vast majority (998, 57.86%) of incidents were impulsive and emotionally-driven, following adverse life circumstances. Most mass murderers prompted by emotional upset were found to be driven by despair or extreme sadness over life events (161, 16.13% within the category); romantic rejection or loss, or severe jealousy (204, 20.44% within the category); some specific non-romantic grudge (212, 21.24% within the category); or explosive, overwhelming rage following a dispute (266, 26.65% within the category). Results suggest that policies seeking to prevent mass murder should focus on criminal history, as well as subacute emotional disturbances not associated with severe mental illness in individuals with poor coping skills who have recently experienced negative life events.
大规模谋杀,尤其是大规模枪击事件,已成为一个日益严重的重大公共卫生问题。人们对这些行为的具体动机了解不足,常常过度归咎于严重精神疾病。识别引发大规模谋杀的各种因素可能有助于预防此类事件。我们研究了1900年至2019年全球范围内1725起公开用英文在印刷品或网络上描述的大规模谋杀事件。我们根据报道的主要动机因素,将每起事件实证性地归类为十个类别之一,并对所有大规模谋杀者进行了分析,同时也比较了美国和非美国的大规模枪击者之间的差异。与精神疾病相关的精神病或精神错乱很少是动机因素(166起;9.6%),且与使用枪支以外手段实施的大规模谋杀显著相关。绝大多数事件(998起,57.86%)是冲动且受情绪驱动的,发生在不利的生活环境之后。大多数因情绪困扰引发的大规模谋杀者被发现是出于对生活事件的绝望或极度悲伤(该类别中有161起,占16.13%);浪漫关系中的拒绝或失去,或严重嫉妒(该类别中有204起,占20.44%);一些特定的非浪漫怨恨(该类别中有212起,占21.24%);或争吵后爆发的压倒性愤怒(该类别中有266起,占26.65%)。结果表明,旨在预防大规模谋杀的政策应关注犯罪历史,以及近期经历负面生活事件、应对能力差且与严重精神疾病无关的个体的亚急性情绪障碍。