Ecology and Environment, Inc. Reports UNCC Fails to Establish International Precedent for Damages to Public Health
21 Julho 2005 - 5:54PM
PR Newswire (US)
Ecology and Environment, Inc. Reports UNCC Fails to Establish
International Precedent for Damages to Public Health BUFFALO, N.Y.,
July 21 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- The decision by the United
Nations Compensation Commission (UNCC) to refuse compensation to
the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia for adverse health effects to the
Kingdom's population during and after the 1990-1991 Gulf War is
lamented by the research team assembled to assess these impacts.
The team was composed of Ecology and Environment, Inc. technical
and medical staff and scientists from the Johns Hopkins University
Bloomberg School of Public Health. In 2001, the UNCC provided
funding support to the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia for the research.
The UNCC panel was established in 1998 to resolve claims against
Iraq for environmental and public health damages related to the
1990- 91 Gulf War. The E&E public health team presented results
from their assessment of the public health impacts from the 1990-91
Gulf War and the oil well fires on the population of Saudi Arabia
to the UNCC in numerous technical submittals and at a September
2004 hearing in Geneva, Switzerland. The results of the team's
assessment indicated that exposure to war-related air pollution and
trauma had a significant impact on the health of the population of
Saudi Arabia. The lead public health staff for Ecology and
Environment, Inc. are Dr. Richard V. Lee, Medical Director for
Ecology and Environment and Professor of Medicine and Anthropology
at the State University of New York at Buffalo, and Dr. Cristopher
Williams, Senior Toxicologist. The Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School
of Public Health investigations were led by Dr. Jonathan M. Samet,
Chairman of the Department of Epidemiology and Co-Director of the
Risk Sciences and Public Policy Institute, and Dr. Patrick Breysse,
Director of the Division of Environmental Health Engineering in the
Bloomberg School's Department of Environmental Health Sciences. The
investigations involved a multi-task research effort including a
human health risk assessment, an evaluation of historical
hospital-based records and air pollution data, and a survey of
exposure to air pollution during the Gulf War and the current
health status of 20,000 Saudi citizens. A quantitative risk
assessment was developed to calculate the number of premature
deaths associated with the population's exposure to increased
particulate matter air pollution. Analysis of monitored air
pollution levels during and immediately after the Gulf War
indicated that the war-exposed area sustained a substantial
increase in particulate matter levels. A large body of scientific
studies documenting a link between increasing concentrations of
particulates and the rise of premature death was reviewed, and an
estimate of the increased risk of premature death was developed.
Based on these data, the public health research team estimated that
almost 1,400 premature deaths resulted from the exposure to
increased particulate matter levels. The Exposure and Health Survey
(EHS) was one of the largest public health surveys ever conducted
in the Middle East. The survey was developed using verifiable
survey instruments. Trained interviewers surveyed approximately
15,000 people randomly selected from communities that had been
exposed to high levels of air pollution from the Gulf War oil fires
and from the exhaust emitted by the large number of military
vehicles used in the conflict, as well as to war-related traumatic
events. Data from these interviews were compared with a sample of
approximately 5,000 people who lived in areas not heavily impacted
by the Gulf War air pollution. Analysis of the results from the
Exposure and Health Survey indicated that people living in areas
that were exposed to high levels of air pollution were at two to
three times increased risk of suffering from health problems
including asthma, chronic bronchitis, and other respiratory
conditions, as well as cardiovascular disease, when compared to
people who had lived in areas not experiencing the Gulf War-
related air pollution. The Exposure and Health Survey also
identified a substantial increase in the risk of the exposed
population of experiencing symptoms associated with post-traumatic
stress disorder (PTSD), with the increase ranging from two to
five-fold depending on the evaluation criteria selected. Subsequent
to the completion of the Exposure and Health Survey, a randomly
selected group of participants were recalled for an interview in
greater depth and a laboratory and physical examination carried out
by medical centers in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. The results of
this evaluation indicated good consistency in reportage in the
original interview and questionnaire and the subsequent interview
and clinical examination. Combining the Exposure and Health Survey
findings of increased health risks with projections of the number
of exposed Saudis out to the year 2030 using standard life-table
methodology, the Gulf War events were calculated to result in 2
million excess hospital visits, 6 million excess visits to hospital
outpatient departments, and 23 million excess visits to primary
health care centers over time. "The danger, of course," commented
Dr. Lee, "is that the dismissal of the public health claims by the
United Nations Claims Commission will be interpreted to mean that
there were no health consequences to the War and the oil well
fires. Nothing could be further from the truth!" In support of Dr.
Lee's position, Dr. Samet noted that "The consistent findings of
increased adverse health outcomes, both physical and mental,
indicate that exposure to air pollutants, military activities, and
other negative factors associated with the Gulf War compromised the
health and well being of residents of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.
The impact of these events can be expected to result in increased
health care costs and reduced quality of life for the Saudi
population. Dr. Lee adds, "There are two carefully done studies,
one by the Kuwait- Harvard University team, and the other by the
Saudi E&E-Johns Hopkins team, that clearly document the
increased adverse health effects of the War and its aftermath on
the citizens of those countries. Given the scientifically rigorous
analytical methods used and the results of the E&E team's
analysis, it is difficult to understand that the evidence presented
by the government of Saudi Arabia was labeled insufficient to
support the claim for damages to public health. Further, the UNCC
dismissal on economic and strictly legal grounds is not supported
by the scientific evidence. Perhaps the most dangerous impact of
the UNCC decision is the notion that injuries to the health of
residents in war situations because of environmental degradation
and destruction are not important. With no liability assigned to
the perpetrators, the UNCC has failed to establish an international
precedent for damages to public health that are the consequences of
armed conflict. Effectively, there is little to discourage future
targeting of natural resources and the environment for vandalism
and for purposeful harm to large numbers of noncombatant
civilians." Ecology and Environment, Inc is headquartered in
Lancaster, New York, a suburb of Buffalo. Its common stock is
listed on the American Stock Exchange under the symbol EEI. E &
E can be located on the World Wide Web at http://www.ene.com/.
DATASOURCE: Ecology and Environment, Inc. CONTACT: Ronald Frank,
+1-716-684-8060, for Ecology and Environment, Inc. Web site:
http://www.ene.com/
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