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Journal Article

Citation

Risse M, Weilbächer N, Birngruber C, Verhoff MA. Arch. Kriminol. 2010; 225(5-6): 188-194.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2010, Verlag Schmidt-Romhild)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

20642257

Abstract

There are no verified statistics about deaths occurring in hotels, and only a few cases have been described in the literature. A recent case induced us to conduct a systematic search for deaths in hotels in the autopsy reports of the Institute of Legal Medicine in Giessen for the period from 1968 to 2009. This search yielded 22 evaluable cases in which persons had been found dead or had died in hotels. Data evaluated in the study were sex and age of the deceased, reason for the stay in the hotel and cause of death. Among the deaths, 18 were males and 4 females and the average age was 41 and 40 years respectively. 6 of the male guests had died from a natural and 10 from a non-natural cause. In the remaining two cases, the cause of death could not be determined, but as there was no evidence that another party had been involved, the cases were not further investigated. Of the 4 female guests, 3 had died of a natural cause; in one case, the cause of death remained unclear even after morphological and toxicological investigations. Surprisingly, a third of the men were found to be temporarily living in hotels due to social circumstances. This was not true for any of the women. Our retrospective analysis is based on a comparatively small number of deaths in what were mostly hotels in small to medium-sized towns. Interestingly, the gender ratio of 18:4 for deceased men and women was significantly higher than the usual gender ratio of 2:1 found for forensic autopsies. To be able to draw further conclusions, a greater number of cases would have to be analysed, for example by recruiting additional case files from other institutes of legal medicine. This would also open up the option of investigating possible regional variations.


Language: de

Keywords

Humans; Adult; Infant, Newborn; Aged; Female; Male; Middle Aged; Homicide; Cause of Death; Social Environment; Suicide; Autopsy; Accidental Falls; Poisoning; Death, Sudden; Travel; Germany; Pregnancy; Housing; Death, Sudden, Cardiac; Fetal Death

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