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![]() "Gooneybird" wrote in message ... OTOH, approximately 100 incidents occurring in some 160,000 troops hardly makes an epidemic. That these occurrences are unusual is undeniable; however, their causation is more likely environmentally based than weapon inflicted, as some people are suggesting. The widely separated and random nature of where and when the illnesses struck does not support the weapon theory. George Z. "Mary Shafer" wrote in message news ![]() On 4 Aug 2003 18:23:05 -0700, (blackfire) wrote: Three deaths have been categorised as "possible suicides", three have died from illness, and three from drowning. The rest are unexplained. You take plenty of young guys, reved them up, put them in powerful vehicles and get them to drive on unsafe roads with low lights and little traffic control and imagine what will happen. It is a miracle that more do not get killed. I'll tell you a weird one, though. About one hundred soldiers in theater have had pneumonia and at least two have died. Fifteen cases were severe enough to require ventilation; of these cases, two died, ten recovered, and three are still hospitalized. All different units, all different locations, spread over time. No evidence of exposure to chemical or biological weapons, environmental toxins, or SARS. Healthy, fit, young people don't get pneumonia. They just don't. When they do, rare though it is, they don't die from it. On the contary pneumonia is MUCH more common an illness than people believe affecting around 1% of the general population every year. 100 cases in a population of 160,000 is not a very high figure and a 2% mortality rate is well within the normal range. A study in NYC in 1981 put the mortality rate for adults between 25 and 44 years of age at 4.2 per 100,000 population. The US army carried out a study on pneumonia in its active duty soldiers between 1990 and 1996 , the crude incidence rate was 231 per 100,000 soldiers per year. http://amsa.army.mil/1Msmr/1997/v03_n02_Article1.htm The figures from Iraq seem seem to be pretty much as one would expect from that size a deployment based on previous demographic data. Keith |
#3
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![]() "Gooneybird" wrote in message ... OTOH, approximately 100 incidents occurring in some 160,000 troops hardly makes an epidemic. That these occurrences are unusual is undeniable; however, their causation is more likely environmentally based than weapon inflicted, as some people are suggesting. The widely separated and random nature of where and when the illnesses struck does not support the weapon theory. That and the fact that pneumonia is a symptom and not a disease. ![]() jpt |
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