@article {Papapietro505, author = {Daniel J. Papapietro and Elizabeth Barbo}, title = {Commentary: Toward a Psychodynamic Understanding of Filicide{\textemdash}Beyond Psychosis and Into the Heart of Darkness}, volume = {33}, number = {4}, pages = {505--508}, year = {2005}, publisher = {Journal of the American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law Online}, abstract = {Much of the literature on filicide explores acute psychosis, sociopathy, or malignant narcissism (psychiatrically ill versus not psychiatrically ill) as primary explanations of why parents kill children. In this issue, Hatters Friedman et al. review the literature on acute psychiatric symptoms in an effort to identify key risk factors for filicide that might have predictive value. In this commentary, we assert the argument that filicide is a complex phenomenon that is the result of more than just psychosis or environmental stressors and that, because not all parents who become psychiatrically ill kill, there may be specific risk factors related to individual underlying psychodynamic conflicts.}, issn = {1093-6793}, URL = {https://jaapl.org/content/33/4/505}, eprint = {https://jaapl.org/content/33/4/505.full.pdf}, journal = {Journal of the American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law Online} }