Jump to: Page Content, Site Navigation, Site Search,
You are seeing this message because your web browser does not support basic web standards. Find out more about why this message is appearing and what you can do to make your experience on this site better.
Robin M Coupland Unit of the
Chief Medical Officer, International Committee of the Red Cross,
19 avenue de la Paix, 1202 Geneva, Switzerland
Correspondence to: R Coupland
rcoupland{at}icrc.org
| |
Abstract |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Objective:
To determine the implications of variation in mortality associated with use of weapons in different contexts.
Design:
Literature review.
Settings:
Armed conflicts and civilian mass shootings, 1929-96.
Main outcome measure:
Mortality from wounds.
Results:
During the fighting of war the number of
people wounded is at least twice the number killed and may be 13 times as high; this ratio of the number wounded to the number killed results
from the impact of a weapon system on human beings in the particular
context of war. When firearms are used against people who are
immobilised, in a confined space, or unable to defend themselves the
wounded to killed ratio has been lower than 1 or even 0.
Conclusions:
Mortality from firearms depends not only
on the technology of the weapon or its ammunition but also on the context in which it is used. The increased mortality resulting from the
use of firearms in situations other than war requires a complex
interaction of factors explicable in terms of wound ballistics and the
psychology of the user. Understanding these factors has implications
for recognition of war crimes. In addition, the lethality of
conventional weapons may be increased if combatants are disabled by the
new non-lethal weapons beforehand; this possibility requires careful
legal examination within the framework of the Geneva Conventions.
|
Key messages
|
| |
Introduction |
|---|
|
|
|---|
The effects of weapons on humans resulting from their design are
different from those resulting from the context in which the weapons
are used. The mortality associated with a particular kind of
weapon
that is, the proportion of those injured who die
is a
measurable outcome. Conventional weapons are designed to cause injury
by transmitting kinetic energy to the body, generally not to a specific
part of the body (with the exception of buried antipersonnel mines),
and arms and legs make up almost half of the human
target.1 In this article conventional weapons are
legitimate weapons currently used by armies that utilise projectiles or
non-nuclear explosions.1 Little attention has been paid to
the fact that the mortality associated with a given weapon varies
considerably according to the context in which it is used.
Mortality associated with weapons during war has been recorded in the
medical literature.2-13 However, weapons might be used in
armed conflict but outside the international laws of war
for example,
against civilians or to execute prisoners. Weapons have been used by
military staff on unarmed civilians or prisoners of war; in such cases
the number of dead may be known from a body count or from forensic
evidence of mass graves, but the number of survivors is either unknown
or likely to be none.14-17 Conventional weapons may also
be used in urban violence, murders, or terrorism. Firearms,
particularly automatic weapons, have been used in mass shootings, in
which the number of people killed may be more than the number
wounded.18-25
We reviewed official figures in the medical literature on mortality
from the use of conventional weapons and firearms under various
circumstances to see how mortality varies according to the context in
which weapons are used.
| |
Methods |
|---|
|
|
|---|
We sought data on the number of people wounded and killed in armed conflicts or mass shootings from three sources: Medline searches; official military casualty figures quoted in the medical literature; and BBC radio's World Service.
We performed a search on Medline for reports that gave statistics on those wounded and killed in armed conflicts since 1940. We also wrote to the chief military medical officers of 89 countries as listed in the International Committee of Military Medicine asking for medical publications in Index Medicus that might contain official statistics on casualties; we did not ask for any confidential information.
We performed a search on Medline for reports published since 1980 that reported mass casualties of firearms outside the context of armed conflict, gave the number of people wounded and killed, and gave the context in which the weapons were used in each event. Some of these publications contained data on incidents that happened earlier this century.
In this study wounded means the number of people who were injured and survived to leave hospital, while killed means the number of people whose injuries were fatal, including those killed where the weapons were used (the military equivalent being killed in action) and those who died after reaching a medical facility (the military equivalent being died of wounds). We calculated the ratio of the number of people wounded to the number of people killed.
One of us (RC) tabulated a parallel analysis of some incidents reported
on BBC radio's World Service from January 1996 to the end of 1998. These incidents were unverified and do not represent all incidents
reported by this news service.
| |
Results |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Table 1 shows the incident or official figures for wounds sustained in the context of armed conflict since 1940. The ratio of the number of people wounded to the number killed ranged from 1.9 to 27.8. Two additional articles gave the proportions of people wounded who eventually died in major conflicts since 1940, without giving absolute numbers. 10 11 Total deaths were never more than 26% of all casualties, a wounded to killed ratio of 2.8. In two reports accurate casualty figures were known for soldiers wounded by rifles in a military context. 5 6 The wounded to killed ratios were 1.9 and 2.2.
|
Table 2 shows the incidents in which weapons, mostly automatic military rifles, were used outside armed conflict. The wounded to killed ratio ranged from 0 to 4.4. Comparison of the data in tables 1 and 2 showed that in the context of armed conflict the number of people killed was never more than the number of people wounded and the wounded to killed ratio did not fall below 1.9. By contrast, in a context outside armed conflict the use of military firearms frequently resulted in more people dying than being wounded.
|
Table 3 shows the absolute numbers of people wounded and killed and the wounded to killed ratio for an incomplete list of some military or paramilitary operations reported by BBC radio's World Service.
|
| |
Discussion |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Mortality from firearms differs with the context in which they are used. This might not need substantiation, but understanding this relation might allow data on mortality to determine the context in which weapons were used. This has important implications for the recognition of war crimes.
Limitations of the study
This study has several limitations. The medical literature does
not contain statistics on all battles or civilian incidents in which
firearms have been used. However, the articles we found include large
numbers from different situations.
Mortality in context
If mortality associated with use of firearms varies according to
context, the higher mortality associated with some of the incidents in
table 2 can be partly explained by wound ballistics. Firstly, the
victims are likely to be closer to the user, and so the kinetic energy
available for deposit in the body is greater, which in turn results in
larger wounds.
27 28
Secondly, victims are more likely to
have multiple wounds from automatic rifles. Thirdly, firing automatic
rifles at close range increases the chance of fatal injury. In
addition, users close to their victims may decide to direct the weapon
at the head or central chest. The fundamental importance of this
psychology as a factor in, for instance, the My Lai massacre has been
examined in depth.29
as the victors might claim
if only 20 of their
number are wounded in the local hospital. Similarly, if an official
news report states that a certain number of terrorists were killed in a
gun battle without any survivors, those wounded or captured are likely
to have been executed. Wounded combatants are protected by the first
Geneva Convention and prisoners of war by the third.
Mass shootings with weapons in a military, paramilitary, or civilian
context generate considerable media interest. The numbers killed are
known with more certainty than the numbers wounded and are therefore
usually given because a body count is easier than finding and counting
wounded people in different hospitals. Two mass shootings in which the
number of wounded and killed were accurately recorded occurred in
Dunblane in 1996 (17 people died and 12 were injured) and Port Arthur
in 1996 (34 people were killed and 18 reached hospital); each was
carried out by one man. The wounded to killed ratios are 0.7 and 0.5 respectively, and this is further evidence that the number of people
killed can be greater than the number of wounded in civilian contexts.
In a military or paramilitary context, however, the media rarely
comment when the number of killed surpasses the number of wounded.
Understanding how and why the wounded to killed ratio falls below 1 should lower the threshold of suspicion and provide evidence of war
crimes. The data on the unverified incidents in table 3 could be
reviewed with this in mind.
"Non-lethal" weapons
The principle that mortality or lethality may be determined not
only by a weapon's technology but also by how it is used is crucial to
the debate about new or "non-lethal" weapons. These new weapon
technologies are intended to give the commander the ability to conduct
warfare with minimal deaths and injury. The antipersonnel component of
this new technology is designed to cause incapacitation; it includes
sticky foam, calmative agents, and energy sources such as infrasound
and electromagnetic waves.30-36
that is, unable to use their weapons or to take
cover
being exposed to the effects of conventional weapons. Given the
increased mortality in some of the incidents reported in table 2, the
concern that "non-lethal" weapons could, paradoxically, lead to a
higher mortality from conventional weapons is well
founded.32 Combining the effects of these two weapon
systems in war must be examined from the legal perspective.
| |
Acknowledgments |
|---|
Contributors: RMC formulated the original idea for the study and undertook the literature review. DRM designed the study. Both wrote the paper. RMC is guarantor.
| |
Footnotes |
|---|
Funding: No additional funding.
Competing interests: None declared.
| |
References |
|---|
|
|
|---|
| 1. | Coupland RM, ed. The SIrUS Project: towards a determination of which weapons cause "superfluous injury or unnecessary suffering." Geneva: International Committee of the Red Cross, 1997. |
| 2. | Reister FA. Medical statistics in world war II. Washington, DC: Department of the Army, Office of the Surgeon General, 1975:76-79. |
| 3. | Bellamy RF. Combat trauma overview. In: Zaitchuk R, Grande CM, eds. Anesthesia and perioperative care of the combat casualty. Falls Church, VI: Office of the Surgeon General, United States Army , 1996. |
| 4. | Dice WH. The role of military emergency physicians in an assault operation in Panama. Ann Emerg Med 1991; 20: 1336-1340[Medline]. |
| 5. | Clyne AJ. The wounding and killing power of small-arms fire in jungle operations. J R Army Corps 1955; 101: 33-38. |
| 6. | Owen Smith MS. A computerised data retrieval system for the wounds of war: the Northern Ireland casualties. J R Army Med Corps 1981; 127: 31-54[Medline]. |
| 7. | Mellor SG, Cooper GJ. Analysis of 828 servicemen killed or injured by explosion in Northern Ireland 1970-84: the hostile action casualty system. Br J Surg 1989; 76: 1006-1010[Medline]. |
| 8. | Gofrit ON, Leibovici D, Shapira SC, Shemer J, Stein M, Michaelson M. The trimodal death distribution of trauma victims: military experience from the Lebanon war. Mil Med 1997; 162: 24-26[Medline]. |
| 9. | Butkovic-Soldo S, Brkic K, Puntaric D, Petrovicki Z. Medical corps support to a brigade action during an offensive action including river crossing. Mil Med 1995; 160: 408-411[Medline]. |
| 10. | Melsom MA, Farrar MD, Volkers RC. Battle casualties. Ann R Coll Surg Engl 1975; 56: 287-303. |
| 11. | Bellamy RF. The medical effects of conventional weapons. World J Surg 1992; 16: 888-892[Medline]. |
| 12. |
Coupland RM.
Epidemiological approach to the surgical management of the casualties of war.
BMJ
1994;
308:
1693-1697 |
| 13. | Mitchell TJ, Smith GM. Casualties and medical statistics of the Great War. London: Army Medical Services, His Majesty's Stationery Office, 1931:108. |
| 14. | Raszeja S, Chroscielewski E. Medicolegal reconstruction of the Katyn forest massacre. Forens Sci Int 1994; 68: 1-6. |
| 15. | Kovacevic S, Judas M, Marusic A. Civilian massacres in Banija:Kraljevcani and Pecki, 14-16 March 1991 [in Serbo-Croat]. Lijec Vjesn 1991; 113: 205-208[Medline]. |
| 16. | Marcikic M, Marusic A. The civilian massacre in Dalj on 1 August 1991 [in Serbo-Croat]. Lijec Vjesn 1991; 113: 202-205[Medline]. |
| 17. | Marcikic M, Krauz Z, Dmitrovic B, Mosunjac M, Marusic A. Civilian massacre near Podravsky Slatina, 3 September 1991 [in Serbo-Croat]. Lijec Vjesn 1991; 113: 208-210[Medline]. |
| 18. | Broome G, Butler-Manuel A, Budd J, Carter PG, Warlow TA. The Hungerford shooting incident. Injury 1988; 19: 313-317[Medline]. |
| 19. | Brinded BP, Taylor AJ. A mass killing in New Zealand. Aust N Z J Psychiatry 1995; 29: 316-320[Medline]. |
| 20. | Beyersdorf SR, Nania JN, Luna GK. Community medical response to the Fairchild mass casualty event. Am J Surg 1996; 171: 467-470[Medline]. |
| 21. |
Curry JL.
A disaster that could happen any where the Palm Bay massacre.
J Emerg Nurs
1990;
16:
42-8A.
|
| 22. | Early E. Darnall Army Community Hospital's response to the Killeen massacre. J Emerg Nurs 1992; 18: 316-318[Medline]. |
| 23. | Eckert WG. The St Valentine's Day massacre. Am J Forens Med Pathol 1980; 1: 67-70[Medline]. |
| 24. | Meloy JR. Predatory violence during mass murder. J Forens Sci 1997; 42: 326-329. |
| 25. | Reay DT, Haglund WD, Bonnell HJ. Wah Mee massacre: the murder of 13 Chinese adults in a Seattle gambling club. Am J Forens Med Pathol 1986; 7: 330-336[Medline]. |
| 26. | Coupland RM. Classification and management of war wounds. In: Johnson CD, Taylor I, eds. Recent advances in surgery. No 17. London: Churchill Livingstone, 1994:121-134. |
| 27. | Sellier KG, Kneubuehl BP. Wound ballistics. Amsterdam: Elsevier , 1994. |
| 28. | Kneubuehl BP. Small calibre weapon systems. In: Expert meeting on certain weapon systems and on implementation mechanisms in international law. Geneva: International Committee of the Red Cross, 1994:26-39. |
| 29. | Grossman D. On killing: the psychological cost of learning to kill in war and society. Boston: Little, Brown , 1995. |
| 30. | Anonymous. Nonlethal weapons: emerging requirements for security strategy. Washington, DC: Institute for Foreign Policy Analysis , 1996. |
| 31. | Arkin WM. Acoustic anti-personnel weapons: an inhumane future? Medicine, Conflict and Survival 1997; 14: 314-326. |
| 32. |
Coupland RM.
"Non-lethal" weapons: precipitating a new arms race.
BMJ
1997;
315:
72 |
| 33. | Dando M. A new form of warfare: the rise of non-lethal weapons. London: Brassey's , 1996. |
| 34. | Lewer N, Schofield S. Non-lethal weapons: a fatal attraction? London: Zed Books , 1997. |
| 35. | Pengelly R. Wanted: a watch on non-lethal weapons. Int Defence Rev 1994; 27: 1. |
| 36. | Spinney L. A fate worse than death. New Scientist 1997 Oct 18:26-7. |
(Accepted 7 April 1999)
Israeli students are refusing to perform intimate examinations on anaesthetised women without their informed consent.