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Autor:
Michel B. Aboutanos, MD, MPH
Michel B. Aboutanos, MD, MPH
Virginia Commonwealth University
Medical Center / Divisions of Trauma
/ Critical
Care & General Surgery, Department
of Surgery, Richmond Virginia 23298
Telephone: (804) 827-1207
Fax: (804) 8270285
E-mail: mbaboutanos@vcu.ed
Richmond Virginia, USA |
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BIOTERRORISM - BIG DISASTERS
AN EPIDEMIOLOGICAL SHIFT IN
TERRORISM AND COMPLEX DISASTERS
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Two forms of world violence, international
terrorism and major armed conflicts, have
escalated exponentially in the post-world
wars era. Since 1945, 160 wars and armed
conflicts resulted in an estimated 22
millions deaths and over 60 million
injuries. Between 1990 and 2000, 56
different major armed conflicts in 44
different locations were recorded, with 25
conflicts still active in 2000.1,2
Similarly, since 1968 over 14,000
international terrorist attacks have taken
place throughout the world.3,4
Similar characteristics exist between the
recent armed conflicts and the various
conventional terrorist incidents in terms of
demographics, method of wounding, causes of
injury, risk factors and the implications
for the trauma and critical care
communities.
An extensive review of governmental
documents and published experiences dealing
with wartime injuries and prominent
international terrorist incidents from
1961-2001 revealed specific trends in
demographics, etiologies and methods of
wounding. 392 terrorist incidents from 1961
to 2001 resulted in 27,312 casualties and
5,682 deaths resulted. 70% of all terrorist
incidents were against civilian targets
which constituted 92% of all casualties.
Bombings were the most frequent terrorist
events (44%) and accounted for 74% (20,221)
of all casualties and over 90% of all death.
Similar results were observed in recent
wars. Civilians were the major targets in
recent armed conflicts and accounted for
most of the killed and wounded (80-90%). A
shift toward more powerful explosive devices
(artillery shells and mines) was also noted.
Whereas non civilian victims (army,
paramilitary, government agents) were mainly
male and restricted to the 21- to 40-year
old age group in both armed conflicts and
terrorist incidents, civilians victims were
of all ages and genders. The risk factors
for lethal injuries identified in both
wartime and terrorist incidents were similar
and included (1) the intentional targeting
of civilians (2) the confinement of a large
number of people in a single area (bomb
shelters and hospitals in the armed
conflicts, transportation vehicles such as
buses and commercial airplanes in the
terrorist incidents) (3) personal and
environmental vulnerability of the targeted
victims and (4) the exponential increase in
firepower and lethality of modern
explosives. These factors also lead to
higher mortality rates among critically
injured survivors due to the enormous number
of wounded from secondary blast injuries
that can overwhelm triage, treatment, and
resource/personnel allocation. An
epidemiological shift in the demographics of
the victims and lethality of injuries
corresponds to the shift in targeting of
civilians and the methods of fatal wounding.
Strong data therefore exist regarding
conventional terrorist incidents, and armed
conflicts. History however points to various
rare but key incidents where
non-conventional methods were used in armed
conflicts and war situations to alter the
course of significant historical victories.
The question is: Can such non-conventional
methods be similarly used by terrorist
groups to alter the course of history? It is
long known and feared that the perfect
weapon for mass destruction and hysteria is
germ warfare or biological terrorism.
Unlike the history of conventional weapons
and terrorism, the history of biological
warfare is confounded by several factors
including 1) difficulties confirming
allegations of biological attacks 2) lack of
reliable microbiological and epidemiological
data 3) the use of allegations of biological
attack for propaganda and 4) secrecy
surrounding biological weapons program.
5 It is clear that significant
efforts and skills are needed to carry out
large scale biological terrorist attacks.
This has led to the appropriate skepticism
regarding the plausibility and immanency of
such attacks. However the most devastating
terrorists attack on both military and
civilians were successful because of lack of
imagination and inappropriate preparation of
the victims. This was clearly demonstrated
in the 1983 attack on the US Marines in
Beirut Lebanon, and the 2001 attack on the
World Trade Center in New York, USA.
The implications to the international aid
agencies and to the trauma and critical care
communities are highly significant.
Prevention strategies, targeted preparation
and medical response toward the disease
agents with the greatest potential for
bioterrorism (Anthrax, tularemia, plague,
smallpox, botulism toxins, and viral
hemorrhagic fevers, such as Ebola) must be
developed.
References
1. Taylor B. Seybolt. Major armed
conflicts. SIPRI yearbook 2001.
Armaments, disarmaments and international
security. Oxford: Oxford University Press,
2001
2. Wallensteen, Peter & Margareta
Sollenberg.Armed Conflict, 1989–98.
Journal of Peace Research, Vol. 36, No. 5,
1999
3. Federal Bureau of Investigation,
Terrorism in the United States
.Washington, DC: FBI, 1999.
4. U.S. department of State. Patterns of
Global Terrorism. 1999.
5. Christopher et al. Biological warfare: A
historical Perspective. United States Army
Medical Research Institute of Infectious
diseases, Fort Detrick, Maryland, 2001.
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