Armed Conflict As a Public Health Problem
Christopher Murray, Gary King, Alan Lopez, Niels Tomijima, Etienne Krug. 2002.
"Armed Conflict As a Public Health Problem".
BMJ (British Medical Journal), 324, Pp. 346–349.

Abstract
Armed conflict is a major cause of injury and death worldwide, but we need much better methods of quantification before we can accurately assess its effect. Armed conflict between warring states and groups within states have been major causes of ill health and mortality for most of human history. Conflict obviously causes deaths and injuries on the battlefield, but also health consequences from the displacement of populations, the breakdown of health and social services, and the heightened risk of disease transmission. Despite the size of the health consequences, military conflict has not received the same attention from public health research and policy as many other causes of illness and death. In contrast, political scientists have long studied the causes of war but have primarily been interested in the decision of elite groups to go to war, not in human death and misery. We review the limited knowledge on the health consequences of conflict, suggest ways to improve measurement, and discuss the potential for risk assessment and for preventing and ameliorating the consequences of conflict.
See Also
- [Paper] An Automated Information Extraction Tool For International Conflict Data With Performance As Good As Human Coders: A Rare Events Evaluation Design (2003)
- [Paper] Event Count Models for International Relations: Generalizations and Applications (1989)
- [Paper] Explaining Rare Events in International Relations (2001)
- [Paper] Improving Forecasts of State Failure (2001)
- [Paper] Improving Quantitative Studies of International Conflict: A Conjecture (2000)
- [Paper] Proper Nouns and Methodological Propriety: Pooling Dyads in International Relations Data (2001)
- [Paper] Rethinking Human Security (2002)
- [Paper] The Supreme Court During Crisis: How War Affects only Non-War Cases (2005)