Could 650,000 Iraqis really have died because of the invasion?
Anjana Ahuja

The statistics made headlines all over the world when they were
published in The Lancet in October last year. More than 650,000 Iraqis
– one in 40 of the population – had died as a result of the
American-led invasion in 2003. The vast majority of these "excess"
deaths (deaths over and above what would have been expected in the
absence of the occupation) were violent. The victims, both civilians
and combatants, had fallen prey to airstrikes, car bombs and gunfire.

Body counts in conflict zones are assumed to be ballpark – hospitals,
record offices and mortuaries rarely operate smoothly in war – but
this was ten times any other estimate. Iraq Body Count, an antiwar
web-based charity that monitors news sources, put the civilian death
toll for the same period at just under 50,000, broadly similar to that
estimated by the United Nations Development Agency.

The implication of the Lancet study, which involved Iraqi doctors
knocking on doors and asking residents about recent deaths in the
household, was that Iraqis were being killed on an horrific scale. The
controversy has deepened rather than evaporated. Several academics
have tried to find out how the Lancet study was conducted; none
regards their queries as having been addressed satisfactorily.
Researchers contacted by The Times talk of unreturned e-mails or phone
calls, or of being sent information that raises fresh doubts.

Iraq Body Count says there is "considerable cause for scepticism" and
has complained that its figures had been misleadingly cited in the The
Lancet as supporting evidence.

One critic is Professor Michael Spagat, an economist from Royal
Holloway College, University of London. He and colleagues at Oxford
University point to the possibility of "main street bias" – that
people living near major thoroughfares are more at risk from car bombs
and other urban menaces. Thus, the figures arrived at were likely to
exceed the true number. The Lancet study authors initially told The
Times that "there was no main street bias" and later amended their
reply to "no evidence of a main street bias".

Professor Spagat says the Lancet paper contains misrepresentations of
mortality figures suggested by other organisations, an inaccurate
graph, the use of the word "casualties" to mean deaths rather than
deaths plus injuries, and the perplexing finding that child deaths
have fallen. Using the "three-to-one rule" – the idea that for every
death, there are three injuries – there should be close to two million
Iraqis seeking hospital treatment, which does not tally with hospital
reports.

"The authors ignore contrary evidence, cherry-pick and manipulate
supporting evidence and evade inconvenient questions," contends
Professor Spagat, who believes the paper was poorly reviewed. "They
published a sampling methodology that can overestimate deaths by a
wide margin but respond to criticism by claiming that they did not
actually follow the procedures that they stated." The paper had "no
scientific standing". Did he rule out the possibility of fraud? "No."

If you factor in politics, the heat increases. One of The Lancet
authors, Dr Les Roberts, campaigned for a Democrat seat in the US
House of Representatives and has spoken out against the war. Dr
Richard Horton, editor of the The Lancet is also antiwar. He says: "I
believe this paper was very thoroughly reviewed. Every piece of work
we publish is criticised – and quite rightly too. No research is
perfect. The best we can do is make sure we have as open, transparent
and honest a debate as we can. Then we'll get as close to the truth as
possible. That is why I was so disappointed many politicians rejected
the findings of this paper before really thinking through the issues."

Knocking on doors in a war zone can be a deadly thing to do. But
active surveillance – going out and measuring something – is regarded
as a necessary corrective to passive surveillance, which relies on
reports of deaths (and, therefore, usually produces an underestimate).

Iraq Body Count relies on passive surveillance, counting civilian
deaths from at least two independent reports from recognised
newsgathering agencies and leading English-language newspapers ( The
Times is included). So Professor Gilbert Burnham, Dr Les Roberts and
Dr Shannon Doocy at the Centre for International Emergency, Disaster
and Refugee Studies, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health,
Maryland, decided to work through Iraqi doctors, who speak the
language and know the territory.

They drafted in Professor Riyadh Lafta, at Al Mustansiriya University
in Baghdad, as a co-author of the Lancet paper. Professor Lafta
supervised eight doctors in 47 different towns across the country. In
each town, says the paper, a main street was randomly selected, and a
residential street crossing that main street was picked at random.

The doctors knocked on doors and asked residents how many people in
that household had died. A person needed to have been living at that
address for three months before a death for it to be included. It was
deemed too risky to ask if the dead person was a combatant or
civilian, but they did ask to see death certificates. More than nine
out of ten interviewees, the Lancet paper claims, were able to produce
death certificates. Out of 1,849 households contacted, only 15 refused
to participate. From this survey, the epidemiologists estimated the
number of Iraqis who died after the invasion as somewhere between
393,000 and 943,000. The headline figure became 650,000, of which
601,000 were violent deaths. Even the lowest figure would have raised
eyebrows.

Dr Richard Garfield, an American academic who had collaborated with
the authors on an earlier study, declined to join this one because he
did not think that the risk to the interviewers was justifiable.
Together with Professor Hans Rosling and Dr Johan Von Schreeb at the
Karolinska Institute in Stockholm, Dr Garfield wrote to The Lancet to
insist there must be a "substantial reporting error" because Burnham
et al suggest that child deaths had dropped by two thirds since the
invasion. The idea that war prevents children dying, Dr Garfield
implies, points to something amiss.

Professor Burnham told The Times in an e-mail that he had "full
confidence in Professor Lafta and full faith in his interviewers",
although he did not directly address the drop in child mortality. Dr
Garfield also queries the high availability of death certificates.
Why, he asks, did the team not simply approach whoever was issuing
them to estimate mortality, instead of sending interviewers into a war
zone?

Professor Rosling told The Times that interviewees may have reported
family members as dead to conceal the fact that relatives were in
hiding, had fled the country, or had joined the police or militia.
Young men can also be associated with several households (as a son, a
husband or brother), so the same death might have been reported
several times.

Professor Rosling says that, despite e-mails, "the authors haven't
provided us with the information needed to validate what they did". He
would like to see a live blog set up for the authors and their critics
so that the matter can be clarified.

Another critic is Dr Madelyn Hsaio-Rei Hicks, of the Institute of
Psychiatry in London, who specialises in surveying communities in
conflict. In her letter to The Lancet, she pointed out that it was
unfeasible for the Iraqi interviewing team to have covered 40
households in a day, as claimed. She wrote: "Assuming continuous
interviewing for ten hours despite 55C heat, this allows 15 minutes
per interview, including walking between households, obtaining
informed consent and death certificates."

Does she think the interviews were done at all? Dr Hicks responds:
"I'm sure some interviews have been done but until they can prove it I
don't see how they could have done the study in the way they
describe."

Professor Burnham says the doctors worked in pairs and that interviews
"took about 20 minutes". The journal Nature, however, alleged last
week that one of the Iraqi interviewers contradicts this. Dr Hicks
says: : "I have started to suspect that they [the American
researchers] don't actually know what the interviewing team did. The
fact that they can't rattle off basic information suggests they either
don't know or they don't care."

And the corpses? Professor Burnham says that, according to reports,
mortuaries and cemeteries have run out of space. He says that the
Iraqi team has asked for data to remain confidential because of
"possible risks" to both interviewers and interviewees.

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