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Centre for Research on Globalisation (www.globalresearch.ca)
Lancet, October 29, 2004
Mortality before
and after the 2003 invasion of Iraq
by Les Roberts, Riyadh Lafta, Richard Garfield,
Jamal Khudhairi, Gilbert Burnham
Editor's note
We bring to the attention of our readers this
authoritative study of Les Roberts et al of
the John Hopkins School of Public Health on
the deaths of Iraqi civilians, published by
The Lancet (Online Medical Journal based in
the UK).
The study confirms that:
"Violent deaths were widespread, reported
in 15 of 33 clusters, and were mainly attributed
to coalition forces. Most individuals reportedly
killed by coalition forces were women and children."
"Making conservative assumptions, we
think that about 100,000 excess deaths, or
more have happened since the 2003 invasion
of Iraq,"
Background
In March, 2003, military forces, mainly from
the USA and the UK, invaded Iraq. We did a
survey to compare mortality during the period
of 14·6 months before the invasion with
the 17·8 months after it.
Methods A cluster sample survey was undertaken
throughout Iraq during September, 2004. 33
clusters of 30 households each were interviewed
about household composition, births, and deaths
since January, 2002. In those households reporting
deaths, the date, cause, and circumstances
of violent deaths were recorded. We assessed
the relative risk of death associated with
the 2003 invasion and occupation by comparing
mortality in the 17·8 months after the
invasion with the 14·6-month period
preceding it.
Findings The risk of death was estimated to be
2·5-fold (95% CI 1·6-4·2)
higher after the invasion when compared with
the preinvasion period. Two-thirds of all violent
deaths were reported in one cluster in the
city of Falluja. If we exclude the Falluja
data, the risk of death is 1·5-fold
(1·1-2·3) higher after the invasion.
We estimate that 98000 more deaths than expected
(8000-194000) happened after the invasion outside
of Falluja and far more if the outlier Falluja
cluster is included. The major causes of death
before the invasion were myocardial infarction,
cerebrovascular accidents, and other chronic
disorders whereas after the invasion violence
was the primary cause of death.
Violent deaths were widespread, reported in 15
of 33 clusters, and were mainly attributed
to coalition forces. Most individuals reportedly
killed by coalition forces were women and children.
The risk of death from violence in the period
after the invasion was 58 times higher (95%
CI 8·1-419) than in the period before
the war.
Interpretation Making conservative assumptions,
we think that about 100000 excess deaths, or
more have happened since the 2003 invasion
of Iraq. Violence accounted for most of the
excess deaths and air strikes from coalition
forces accounted for most violent deaths. We
have shown that collection of public-health
information is possible even during periods
of extreme violence. Our results need further
verification and should lead to changes to
reduce non-combatant deaths from air strikes.
Press Report on Lancet Study
Study: 100,000
Excess Civilian Iraqi Deaths Since War
By Patricia Reaney
LONDON (Reuters) - Tens of thousands of Iraqis
have been killed in violence since the U.S.-led
invasion last year, American public health
experts have calculated in a report that estimates
there were 100,000 "excess deaths"
in 18 months.
The rise in the death rate was mainly due to
violence and much of it was caused by U.S.
air strikes on towns and cities.
"Making conservative assumptions, we think
that about 100,000 excess deaths, or more have
happened since the 2003 invasion of Iraq,"
said Les Roberts of the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg
School of Public Health in a report published
online by The Lancet medical journal.
"The use of air power in areas with lots
of civilians appears to be killing a lot of
women and children," Roberts told Reuters.
The report came just days before the U.S. presidential
election in which the Iraq war has been a major
issue.
Mortality was already high in Iraq before the
war because of United Nations sanctions blocking
food and medical imports but the researchers
described what they found as shocking.
The new figures are based on surveys done by
the researchers in Iraq in September 2004.
They compared Iraqi deaths during 14.6 months
before the invasion in March 2003 and the 17.8
months after it by conducting household surveys
in randomly selected neighborhoods.
Previous estimates based on think tank and media
sources put the Iraqi civilian death toll at
up to 16,053 and military fatalities as high
as 6,370.
By comparison about 849 U.S. military were killed
in combat or attacks and another 258 died in
accidents or incidents not related to fighting,
according to the Pentagon.
VERY BAD FOR IRAQI CIVILIANS
The researchers blamed air strikes for many of
the deaths.
"What we have evidence of is the use of
air power in populated urban areas and the
bad consequences of it," Roberts said.
Gilbert Burnham, who collaborated on the research,
said U.S. military action in Iraq was "very
bad for Iraqi civilians."
"We were not expecting the level of deaths
from violence that we found in this study and
we hope this will lead to some serious discussions
of how military and political aims can be achieved
in a way that is not so detrimental to civilians
populations," he told Reuters in an interview.
The researchers did 33 cluster surveys of 30
households each, recording the date, circumstances
and cause of deaths.
They found that the risk of death from violence
in the period after the invasion was 58 times
higher than before the war.
Before the war the major causes of death were
heart attacks, chronic disorders and accidents.
That changed after the war.
Two-thirds of violent deaths in the study were
reported in Falluja, the insurgent held city
50 km (32 miles) west of Baghdad which had
been repeatedly hit by U.S. air strikes.
"Our results need further verification and
should lead to changes to reduce non-combatant
deaths from air strikes," Roberts added
in the study.
Richard Horton, editor of The Lancet, said the
research which was submitted to the journal
earlier this month had been peer-reviewed,
edited and fast-tracked for publication because
of its importance in the evolving security
situation in Iraq.
"But these findings also raise questions
for those far removed from Iraq -- in the governments
of the countries responsible for launching
a pre-emptive war," Horton said in an
editorial.
AP Report, October 29, 2004
Doctors' survey
of families estimates Iraqi wartime deaths
at 100,000
Emma Ross, Associated Press
Doctors' survey of families estimates Iraqi
wartime deaths at 100,000 Friday, October 29,
2004 Emma Ross Associated Press London - A
survey of deaths in Iraqi households estimates
that as many as 100,000 more people may have
died throughout the country in the 18 months
since the U.S.-led invasion than would be expected
based on the death rate before the war.
There is no official figure for the number of
Iraqis killed since the conflict began, but
some non- governmental estimates range from
10,000 to 30,000.
The scientists who wrote the report concede that
the statistics they based their projections
on were of "limited precision," be
cause the quality of the information depends
on the accuracy of the household interviews
used for the study. The interviewers were Iraqis,
most of them doctors.
Designed and conducted by researchers at Johns
Hopkins University, Columbia University and
the Al-Mustansiriya University located in Baghdad,
the study was published Thursday on the Web
site of the Lancet medical journal.
The survey indicated that violence accounted
for most of the extra deaths seen since the
invasion, and that airstrikes by coalition
forces caused most of those deaths, the researchers
wrote in the British-based journal.
Les Roberts, the lead researcher from Johns Hopkins,
said the article's timing just days before
the U.S. presidential election was up to him.
"My motive in doing that was not to skew
the election," Roberts told The Associated
Press. "My motive was that if this came
out during the campaign, both candidates would
be forced to pledge to protect civilian lives
in Iraq."
To conduct the survey, investigators visited
33 neighborhoods spread evenly across the country
in September, randomly selecting clusters of
30 households to sample.
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