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This post is written by Senior Fellow Nancy Cabelus, DNP, MSN, RN, is an international forensic nurse consultant currently working with Physicians for Human Rights on a program addressing sexual violence in conflict zones in central and east Africa.

I am sure that many shared my feelings of sadness and disappointment after hearing that Olympic champion Oscar Pistorius was accused of murdering his girlfriend, Reeva Steencamp on Valentine’s day. The incident reportedly happened in Pistorius’ luxury South African home when Pistorius repeatedly fired a gun through a bathroom door at what he allegedly believed was a home intruder. Pistorius was arrested and released on bail and is restricted from re-entering his home, an active crime scene.

Pistorius, a double leg amputee who runs on carbon fiber blades, is nick named the “Blade Runner”. Just months ago Pistorius competed in the London Olympics where he won 2 gold medals and 1 silver medal as a sprint runner. Reeva Steencamp, a model and aspiring reality TV star reportedly spent the night at Pistorius’ home before an intended business trip the next day. Witnesses stated that they had heard arguing in the hours before Pistorius called the police to report that he had shot his girlfriend.

What makes this case sensational is that the crime was committed against a glamorous young model allegedly by an Olympic athlete who had won the world over as a physically disabled champion and an awe- inspiring human being. What makes this case terribly common is that it is yet another apparent act of domestic violence committed against a woman by an intimate partner… a case about a young woman who was tragically and senselessly killed, taken from her family, and stripped of her life by a man with a violent streak.

South Africa has the highest rate of women killed by an intimate partner according to a South Africa Medical Research Council report.  Professor Rachel Jewkes reports that homicide rates have dropped in South Africa but the number of women killed by intimate partners has increased.

While the media will not have knowledge of all the facts, information and evidence while the investigation is ongoing, the media has informed the public that the lead investigator in this homicide case has resigned with the possibility of  facing negligent homicide charges of his own. News reports have indicated that neighbors heard shouting and gunshots but failed to call the police. This is likely because there have previous accounts of disturbances at the Pistorius residence. Domestic violence has apparently become normalized even in nice neighborhoods in Johannesburg, South Africa.

As a former police detective and a forensic nurse, I have a lot of questions for Mr. Pistorius. I am sure the officers investigating the case have many questions, too. Until the investigation is complete and the case goes to trial, we can only speculate what happened. For those who can’t wait to find out, DStv in South Africa will be airing “Oscar Pistorius: What really happened” on March 24, 2013 at 20:55 hours.

Written by Nancy Cabelus

This post is written by Senior Fellow

taking charge 4

How many times did you leave the office of a health care provider realizing that you had forgotten to ask an important question, or didn’t understand part of the discussion, or had no idea what to do next for your health? Most everyone has had such an experience, including Kathryn Koehne, BSN, RN-TNP, Nursing Systems Specialist at
Gundersen Lutheran Health System in La Cross, Wisconsin. Her personal experiences with this scenario led her to take the advice that she was giving to patients about preparing for these visits in thoughtful but easy ways.

Tonight on Healthstyles on WBAI, 99.5 FM from 11:00 to 11:25, host Diana Mason, PhD, RN, interviews Kathryn Koehne about her tips for preparing for visits to health care providers, whether physicians, nurse practitioners, registered nurses, physician assistants, nutritionists, nurse midwives, specialists, or others. Additional tips can be found at the website for Taking Charge of Your Health at http://www.takingcharge.csh.umn.edu.

How many times did you leave the

Exhibit B of the Army report on “INVESTIGATION INTO CIVILIAN CASUALTIES RESULTING FROM AN ENGAGEMENT ON 12 JULY 2007 IN THE NEW BAGHDAD DISTRICT OF BAGHDAD, IRAQ”

Jim Stubenrauch is a CHMP senior fellow.

It’s fitting that the 10th anniversary of the invasion of Iraq, a milestone passed this week, would occasion some soul-searching among those who supported the war as well as those who opposed it. How many of the war’s stated goals—other than the removal of Saddam Hussein—have been accomplished? And at what cost, in blood and treasure, to the people of Iraq and the nations comprising the coalition, the U.S. foremost among them? It’s debatable whether Americans are safer than we were in 2003; are the Iraqis who survived the war any better off?

It seems obvious that a clear understanding of how many Iraqi civilians were killed, wounded, and displaced in the conflict would be necessary to answer these questions, and it’s symptomatic of our current political predicament that these basic facts remain elusive. How can policymakers and the American people judge the success or failure of the mission if we haven’t taken accurate measure of the human cost of the war—or come to grips with the most accurate measures we have? And have mainstream news organizations done all they should in making the facts known?

When the last U.S. combat troops left Iraq in December 2011, even the New York Times and National Public Radio—two news organizations often charged with having a “liberal bias”—settled on “more than 100,000” when reporting the number of Iraqi civilians killed in the war (NPR’s All Things Considered repeated the same figure this past weekend). But several studies that used the best epidemiologic methods available had already reported much higher estimates.

The March 16 issue of the Lancet (subscription necessary) contains several important articles that aim “to crystallise Iraq’s current health situation, to clarify its most pressing health problems, and to offer a prognosis for the future health of the country.” A short article by Frederick Burkle, Jr. and Richard Garfield, “Civilian Mortality after the 2003 Invasion of Iraq,” performs a great service in untangling the knotty history of several highly contested mortality counts of the past decade. They show how the studies’ findings were resisted for political reasons and they compare the methods and estimates of the most important studies, including the ongoing Iraq Body Count Project (which uses passive surveillance methods, primarily media reports of killings) and the Lancet’s own controversial mortality surveys of 2004 and 2006 (which used active surveillance methods). (Burkle, now at the Harvard Humanitarian Initiative, was the first interim minister of public health in Iraq in 2003; Garfield, at Columbia University’s Schools of Nursing and Public Health, was a coauthor of the 2004 Iraq mortality survey.)

The two Lancet reports were based on random cross-sectional cluster sampling surveys, the standard epidemiologic approach to obtaining casualty estimates in conflict zones. The first, published in 2004, found that 100,000 Iraqis had already been killed in the war; the risk of violent death was 58 times higher than it was before the war, and the majority of the dead were women and children killed in air strikes. The second study, published in 2006, estimated that 655,000 excess deaths had occurred because of the war; of these, more than 600,000 were violent deaths. And while the proportion of deaths attributed to coalition forces had diminished, the actual numbers of those killed by the coalition had increased each year. (While there were some problems with the methodology of the two studies, the findings of the second, say the authors, are remarkably consistent with the first. Here’s one of many contemporaneous news articles about the controversy ignited by the publication of the 2006 report.) In light of these statistics, the estimates repeated by the Times and NPR—in 2011 and just the other day—look woefully inadequate.

Burkle and Garfield note that Iraq continues to struggle with a public health emergency. At the conclusion of their article, they write

In truth, because of the politicization and perceived weaknesses of the methods of the Iraq studies, all the studies of civilian death have been discounted or dismissed, yet if half a million civilians have perished, that information should be known. The only accurate death records are of US and coalition forces. Public health data, once untouchable, are increasingly controlled by political decision makers. They cannot have it both ways in defining the ground truth; in every war, combatant forces of states and the leaders they serve must be accountable.

[caption id="" align="aligncenter" width="536"] Exhibit B of