Connect with Healthcetera
Saturday, June 7, 2025
HomeStandard Blog Whole Post (Page 239)

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

The majority of nurses have the skills to talk about almost anything with patients and family members – from intimate conversations about body functioning to feelings about facing death to chatting with someone about their shared love of bicycling.

But talking to a health reporter about their nursing expertise is something that many nurses have shied away from. And before recent times, many journalists didn’t consider calling on their expertise for a story. But that’s changing.  All for the good of the public.

300298_10151491510874356_356164808_nCHMP’s is working to make nurses nationally media ready through our program, Nurse Messenger, part of our Media & Leadership Training for Health ProfessionalsNurse Messenger media training provides nurses the tools, skills, and confidence necessary to participate in the media’s coverage of health issues, and to reach the public with their messages.

Diana Mason and I just returned from Columbia, South Carolina, where we co-led a one-day intensive workshop for nurse leaders of the South Carolina One Voice One Plan Action Future of Nursing Action Coalition (SC OVOP).  SC OVOP  is working with nurses and organizational leaders across the state to ensure the implementation of the recommendations of the 2010 landmark Institute of Medicine (IOM) report, The Future of Nursing: Leading Change, Advancing Health.

This group of distinguished nurse leaders, all with prior media experience, took it to the next level. They polished those media skills and worked seamlessly together to create strong messages to advance nursing in South Carolina. They targeted key issues on education, scope of practice and leadership.

They were just awesome.

Reporters in South Carolina reading this – contact them (and they’ll be pitching you soon) for interviews on the latest issues on health care for the citizens of you state.

576189_10151491508429356_1211055358_n

Nationally, we are creating a corps of nurses trained and ready to engage the media in health-care issues so their voices are heard and to better reach the pubic to advance conversations about health and health policy.

575191_10151491494279356_1133822976_n

The majority of nurses have the skills


carolroyecrop8Carol Roye, EdD, CPNP, FAAN, is Professor and Assistant Dean for Research at the Hunter-Bellevue School of Nursing and a Faculty Associate at the Roosevelt House Public Policy INstitute. She is also a women’s health nurse practitioner and a researcher who studies women’s reproductive issues. She is an advocate for protecting women’s reproductive rights, frequently noting media misrepresentations of the facts. Dr. Roye noted two recent media lapses that led her to contact the PBS News Hour and the New York Times. She has shared them with HealthCetera:

PBS Newshour

In response to a piece on the Arkansas abortion law that bans procedures after 12 weeks of pregnancy, Dr. Roye emailed the Newshour’s producers:

“A guest on the Newshour tonight (3/7), a reporter from Arkansas talking about the new abortion law there, mentioned medical abortions, ‘such as Plan B’. Plan B IS NOT an abortifiacient. It can prevent pregnancy, but would NOT CAUSE ABORTION if taken by a pregnant woman. She was thinking about RU-486. There is so much confusion about this issue — please make the correction on air.”

PBS Newshour responded by posting a note with the online video that can be viewed here.

New York Times

On March 11th, the New York Times published an article about an Arkansas State Senator who has been a leading proponent of a law that would ban abortions if a fetal heartbeat can be detected. Dr. Roye wrote the following letter to the Times that was not published, telling HealthCetera that she almost never sees letters to the editor on abortion in that paper.

“One might believe that Arkansas State Senator Jason Rapert has a really strong belief in the sanctity of life, because he wants to restrict abortion in Arkansas at 6 weeks after a woman’s last menstrual period, or, typically, 4 weeks gestation. Yet, Mr. Rapert has a 100% rating from the NRA. We know that a gun in the home is much more likely to kill someone in the home, often a child, than an intruder. How does Mr. Rapert reconcile has concern for blastocysts and embryos smaller than a grain of rice when he is willing to put living, breathing children in jeopardy for the sake of gun rights, or more accurately – for the sake of gun manufacturers?”

You can follow Carol Roye on Twitter @CarolRoyeRN or on her web site at http://carolroye.org/

Carol Roye, EdD, CPNP, FAAN, is Professor