Mortality Trends Comparable to Estimates by Those Using Other
Counting Methods
ByJohns Hopkins Bloomberg
School of Public Health
10/11/06
--- --- - As many as 654,965 more
Iraqis may have died since hostilities began in
Iraq in March 2003 than would have been expected
under pre-war conditions, according to a survey
conducted by researchers at the Johns
Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health
and Al Mustansiriya University in Baghdad. The
deaths from all causes—violent and
non-violent—are over and above the estimated
143,000 deaths per year that occurred from all
causes prior to the March 2003 invasion.
The
estimates were derived from a nationwide
household survey of 1,849 homes throughout Iraq
conducted between May and July 2006. The results
are consistent with the findings of an
October 2004 study of Iraq mortality
conducted by the Hopkins researchers. Also, the
findings closely reflect the increased mortality
trends reported by other organizations that
utilized passive methods of counting mortality,
such as counting bodies in morgues or deaths
reported by the news media. The study is
published in the October 14, 2006, edition of
the peer-reviewed scientific journal,
The Lancet.
“As we
found with our previous survey, the majority of
deaths in Iraq are due to violence—although we
also saw a small increase in deaths from
non-violent causes, such as heart disease,
cancer and chronic illness. Gunshots were the
primary cause of violent deaths. To put these
numbers in context, deaths are occurring in Iraq
now at a rate more than three times that from
before the invasion of March 2003,” said
Gilbert Burnham, MD, PhD, lead author of the
study and co-director of the Bloomberg School’s
Center for Refugee and Disaster Response.
“Our total estimate is much higher than other
mortality estimates because we used a
population-based, active method for collecting
mortality information rather than passive
methods that depend on counting bodies or
tabulated media reports of violent deaths.
Though the numbers differ, the trend in
increasing numbers of deaths closely follows
that measured by the U.S. Defense Department and
the Iraq Body Count group.”
Key points of the study include:
• Estimated
654,965 additional deaths in Iraq between March
2003 and July 2006
• Majority of the additional deaths (91.8
percent) caused by violence
• Males aged 15-44 years accounted for 59
percent of post-invasion violent deaths
• About half of the households surveyed were
uncertain who was responsible for the death of a
household member
• The proportion of deaths attributed to
coalition forces diminished in 2006 to 26
percent. Between March 2003 and July 2006,
households attributed 31 percent of deaths to
the coalition
• Mortality data from the 2006 study reaffirm
2004 estimates by Hopkins researchers and
mirrors upward trends measured by other
organizations
• Researchers recommend establishment of an
international body to calculate mortality and
monitor health of people living in all regions
affected by conflict
The
mortality survey used well-established and
scientifically proven methods for measuring
mortality and disease in populations. These same
survey methods were used to measure mortality
during conflicts in the Congo, Kosovo, Sudan and
other regions. For the Iraq study, data were
collected from 47 randomly selected clusters of
40 households each. At each household selected,
trained Iraqi surveyors collected data on the
number of births and deaths that occurred in the
household between January 1, 2002, and June 30,
2006. To be considered a household member, the
deceased had to have lived in the home at least
three months prior to death. When interviewers
asked to see a death certificate at households
reporting a death, it was presented in 92
percent of instances. The survey recorded 1,474
births and 629 deaths among 12,801 people
surveyed. The data were then applied to the 26.1
million Iraqis living in the survey area.
While the
survey collected information on the manner of
death, the study did not examine the
circumstances of the death, such as whether the
deceased was actively involved in armed combat,
terrorism, criminal activity or caught in the
middle of the conflict. The study outlines other
limitations of the survey method, including the
hazards of collecting data during a conflict.
The results from the new study closely match the
finding of the group’s October 2004 mortality
survey. The earlier study, also published in The
Lancet, estimated over 100,000 additional deaths
from all causes had occurred in Iraq from March
2003 to August 2004. When data from the new
study were examined, it estimated 112,000 deaths
for the same time period of the 2004 study. The
new survey also found that the number of deaths
attributed to coalition forces had declined in
2006, though overall households attributed 31
percent of deaths to the coalition.
Responsibility could not be attributed in 45
percent of the violent deaths.
According
to the researchers, the overall rate of
mortality in Iraq since March 2003 is 13.3
deaths per 1,000 persons per year compared to
5.5 deaths per 1,000 persons per year prior to
March 2003. This amounts to about 2.5 percent of
Iraqi’s population having died as a consequence
of the war. To put the 654,000 deaths in context
with other conflicts, the authors note that
during the Vietnam War an estimated 3 million
civilians died overall; the Congo conflict was
responsible for 3.8 million deaths; and recent
estimates are that 200,000 have died in Darfur
over the past 31 months.
“Mortality after the 2003 invasion of Iraq: a
cross-sectional cluster sample survey” was
written by Gilbert Burnham, Riyadh Lafta,
Shannon Doocy and Les Roberts.
Funding
for the study was provided by the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology and the Johns Hopkins
Center for Refugee and Disaster Response.
Public
Affairs media contacts for the Johns Hopkins
Bloomberg School of Public Health: Tim Parsons
or Kenna Lowe at 410-955-6878 or
paffairs@jhsph.edu.
Iraq Mortality Study - 2003
In March,
2003, military forces, mainly from the U.S. and
the UK, invaded Iraq. Members and partners of
the Center for Refugee and Disaster Response
in Iraq did a survey to compare mortality during
the period of 14.6 months before the invasion
with the 17.8 months after it. Making
conservative assumptions, they found about
100,000 excess deaths and that air strikes from
coalition forces accounted for most of the
violent deaths. The study also demonstrated
that collecting public health information is
possible even during periods of extreme
violence. Read
the original article.
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