20 research outputs found

    A Novel Method for Verifying War Mortality while Estimating Iraqi Deaths for the Iran-Iraq War through Operation Desert Storm (1980-1993)

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    <div><p>Objectives</p><p>We estimated war-related Iraqi mortality for the period 1980 through 1993.</p><p>Method</p><p>To test our hypothesis that deaths reported by siblings (even dating back several decades) would correspond with war events, we compared sibling mortality reports with the frequency of independent news reports about violent historic events. We used data from a survey of 4,287 adults in 2000 Iraqi households conducted in 2011. Interviewees reported on the status of their 24,759 siblings. Death rates were applied to population estimates, 1980 to 1993. News report data came from the ProQuest <i>New York Times</i> database.</p><p>Results</p><p>About half of sibling-reported deaths across the study period were attributed to direct war-related injuries. The Iran-Iraq war led to nearly 200,000 adult deaths, and the 1990–1991 First Gulf War generated another approximately 40,000 deaths. Deaths during peace intervals before and after each war were significantly lower. We found a relationship between total sibling-reported deaths and the tally of war events across the period, p = 0.02.</p><p>Conclusions</p><p>We report a novel method to verify the reliability of epidemiological (household survey) estimates of direct war-related injury mortality dating back several decades.</p></div

    Raw number of siblings death by year and cause, Iraq 1979–1993.

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    <p><b>Source of data:</b> Survey of 4,287 adults in 1,960 households in Iraq between May and July of 2011,782 sibling deaths by cause between 1980 and 1993. Data provided by the University Collaborative Iraq Mortality Study, which collected household and sibling data from 2000 households across Iraq in 2011. Direct war-related injury deaths / total deaths = 45.3%. Among other deaths, 23.1% were attributed to cardiovascular disease, 22.2% to other injury, 10.7% to cancer, 37.0% to “other” and 7.0% to “don’t know.”</p

    Estimates of numbers of adult deaths per week in Iraq, 1979–1993, by cause as reported by siblings.

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    <p><b>Source of mortality data:</b> Survey of 4,287 adults in 1,960 households in Iraq between May and July of 2011, reporting on 782 sibling deaths between 1980 and 1993. Data provided by the University Collaborative Iraq Mortality Study, which collected household and sibling data from 2000 households across Iraq in 2011; Event calendar collected from literature review. [<a href="http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0164709#pone.0164709.ref024" target="_blank">24</a>–<a href="http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0164709#pone.0164709.ref027" target="_blank">27</a>]</p

    Correlation between reported total Iraqi sibling deaths and new-reported war events, 1980–1993.

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    <p><b>Source of data:</b> Deaths come from a survey of 4,287 adults in 1,960 households in Iraq between May and July of 2011, reporting on 782 sibling deaths by cause between 1980 and 1993. Data provided by the University Collaborative Iraq Mortality Study, which collected household and sibling data from 2000 households across Iraq in 2011. Total incidents come from our review of ProQuest Historical Newspapers database for <i>New York Times</i> articles about Iran or Iraq for the period 1980–1993, illustrating 4,769 non-duplicate events. Spearman correlation between war events and total sibling-estimated deaths is 0.60, <i>P-value</i> 0.02 (note: sensitivity analysis removing strong upper right hand data point, associated with Desert Storm, reduces certainty to p-value 0.07). Spearman correlation between war events and violent war deaths is 0.51, <i>P-value</i> 0.06. Spearman correlation between war events and deaths not associated with war is 0.41, <i>P-value</i> 0.14.</p

    Estimates of the probability of dying between age 15 and age 60, in Iraq 1979–1993.

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    <p><b>Source of data:</b> Survey of 4,287 adults in 1,960 households in Iraq between May and July of 2011, reporting on 782 sibling deaths by cause between 1980 and 1993. Data provided by the University Collaborative Iraq Mortality Study, which collected household and sibling data from 2000 households across Iraq in 2011. The blue points illustrate the estimation of the male 45q15, and the light blue shading illustrates the male 95% uncertainty intervals; The red points illustrate the estimate of female 45q15, and the light red shading illustrates the female uncertainty intervals.</p

    Intentional and unintentional injuries by year and type, 2003–2014.<sup>*</sup>

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    <p>*Data from 2014 limited to first 3 to 5 months.</p><p>Intentional and unintentional injuries by year and type, 2003–2014.<sup><a href="http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0131834#t004fn001" target="_blank">*</a></sup></p
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