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Comparing the top 100 attacks in the Global Terrorism Database: high injury rate versus high fatality rate attacks. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Terrorist attacks can lead to significant casualties, affecting emergency medical systems; this study compares events with high injury rates vs. high fatality rates.
  • The analysis utilized data from the Global Terrorism Database, focusing on key factors like timing, location, and attack methods from the top 100 deadly and injurious events.
  • Findings reveal that high injury rate attacks, particularly bombings and CBRN incidents, impose a heavier burden on healthcare systems than those with high fatalities, highlighting the need for improved preparedness in healthcare responses.

Article Abstract

Background: Terrorist attacks have the potential to be mass casualty events, causing multiple injuries and deaths. High injury rate attacks will particularly place a high burden on emergency medical systems. This study aimed to assess if there is a difference between attacks with high injury rates and high fatality rates.

Methods: The top 100 terrorist events causing the highest number of fatalities versus the highest number of injuries were selected from the Global Terrorism Database. Analyses were performed on temporal factors, location, target type, attack and weapon type, and perpetrator type.

Results: The 9/11 attacks caused the highest number of both fatalities and injuries. With regards to injury rates, the sarin attacks in Tokyo, Japan ranked second. Events with high fatality rates were overrepresented in Sub-Saharan Africa, whereas events with high injury rates were predominant in the Middle East & North Africa. High fatality rates were most often associated with armed assaults and hostage takings. Bombings were responsible for the highest number of injuries. CBRN attacks were overrepresented in the top 100 injuries, and accounted for 11% of the incidents.

Conclusion: High injury rate incidents place a heavy burden on the health care system as the number of injuries is nearly ten times as high as the number of injuries in high fatality rate incidents. Epidemiological analysis of high impact terrorist events may contribute to counter-terrorism preparedness, to an increased focus on dealing with CBRN-events, and thus to a proper medical response to future terrorist events.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00015458.2024.2312493DOI Listing

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