Iraq death rate estimates defended by researchers
Sat Oct 21, 2006 5:34pm ET145
Reuters news service

By Deena Beasley

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - A controversial estimate by public health
experts that hundreds of thousands of Iraqis have died because of the
March 2003 U.S.-led invasion of Iraq is likely an accurate assessment,
researchers said on Saturday.

"Over the last 25 years, this sort of methodology has been used more
and more often, especially by relief agencies in times of emergency,"
said Dr. David Rush, a professor and epidemiologist at Tufts
University in Boston.

The study, published earlier this month by the Lancet medical journal,
employed a method known as "cluster sampling" in which data are
collected through interviews with randomly selected households.

Critics, including President George W. Bush, have said the results are
not credible, but Rush said traditional methods for determining death
rates, such as counting bodies, are highly inaccurate for civilian
populations in times of war.

Researchers from Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore and Al
Mustansiriya University in Baghdad estimated with 95 percent certainty
that the war and its aftermath have resulted in the deaths of between
426,000 and 794,000 Iraqis.

Other estimates have calculated the number of extra Iraqi deaths to be
much lower. The Iraq Body Count Database calculates that between
43,850 and 48,693 extra civilians have died since the invasion.

Rush, speaking at a meeting in Los Angeles on the medical consequences
of the Iraq war, said that the relatively small size of the sample --
1,849 households -- doesn't change the findings, although it does
widen the "confidence limits," hence the large range of the estimated
additional deaths.

In addition, the biases inherent in cluster sampling, such as wording
of questionnaires, would tend to undercount, rather than inflate, the
number of deaths, Rush said.
"I think this is an extremely credible study," said Michael
Intriligator, professor of economics at the University of California
at Los Angeles.

Intriligator, who said he commonly uses cluster sampling in his own
work, noted that the study's most remarkable finding was the death
rates in the country have risen from 5.5 per thousand Iraqis per year
before the invasion to 13.2 per thousand per year as of the study's
July cutoff.

In addition to violence, death rates in Iraq are on the rise because
of threats to public health, including poorly equipped hospitals, said
activist Dr. Dahlia Wasfi.

"The affects on the civilian population of the war in Iraq have been
grossly underestimated," said Jonathan Parfrey, executive director of
the Los Angeles chapter of Physicians for Social Responsibility.

(c) Reuters 2006. All Rights Reserved.

--
Jim Devine / " Why should we hear about body bags, and deaths...I
mean, it's not relevant. So why should I waste my beautiful mind on
something like that?" – Barbara Bush

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