Why the WHO report on congenital anomalies in Iraq is a disgrace
Christopher Busby is an expert on the health effects of ionizing radiation and Scientific Secretary of the European Committee on Radiation Risk.
Published time: September 28, 2013 04:20
http://rt.com/op-edge/who-iraq-report-disgrace-461/
The recently published World Health Organization report on its study of congenital birth anomalies in Iraq is nothing short of a disgrace.
There have been an increasing number of reports about childhood cancers, adult cancers and birth defects in Iraq. Public pressure and media attention to this catastrophic situation prompted a joint study by the World Health Organization (WHO) and the Iraqi Health Ministry to determine the prevalence of birth defects in the country. The study began in May-June 2012 and was completed in early October 2012. But it was not made public until recently. And I have to say that those who designed and carried out the study were well aware that the method they chose could not possible give correct answers to the question of congenital anomaly rates, since they had consulted with me before they started, and I had pointed out why their method was unsafe, even sending them a report suggesting a method that would work.
In May 2011, I was asked to travel to Geneva by the Union of Arab Jurists to make my first presentation at the UN Human Rights Council, reporting our preliminary findings of extraordinarily high rates of cancer, infant mortality and sex ratio perturbations in the population of Fallujah, which we published in the International Journal of Environment and Public Health in 2010. I met with the director of the Human Rights Council, and also with the director of the International Red Cross, and made the case for intervention.
There was massive anecdotal evidence of these genetic damage effects of the US uranium weapons since the mid-1990s and in Fallujah after the 2004 war, but no one had carried out any study. We collected some money from individuals (about £4,000) and marched in. What we found made headlines in The Daily Telegraph, Le Monde and all over the world. In that study, we examined infant mortality rather than congenital birth defects, for reasons we gave in the paper and I will review here.
Later we also published two other follow-up studies based on hospital data, one analyzing 52 elements in the hair of the parents of children with congenital anomalies, the other giving the congenital anomaly rates and types. Both were based on prospective collection of data by the pediatricians from Fallujah General Hospital, and so we could be sure of the types of anomaly and the numbers.
I have to say that the fear generated by these discoveries made it extremely difficult to get the results published. The Lancet threw the papers out without sending them for review. The International Journal of Environment and Public Health was attacked after the first one, by various individuals they refused to name – and they wouldn’t publish the second one, which was published by Conflict and Health. The third one was also rejected by The Lancet and various other frightened journals and eventually was published by the Journal of the Islamic Medical Association, and then only after I asked them what Allah would think of their pusillanimous behavior. So much for scientific truth.
I pointed out to the WHO representative who contacted me in January 2011, Syed Jaffar Hussein, asking if I would join the WHO project, that the kind of questionnaire study that WHO were proposing would fail for two reasons. The first and most critical is that parents will not have sufficient knowledge to diagnose a congenital anomaly in their baby. For example, in the absence of hospital involvement at a high technical level (e.g. Fallujah Hospital) the baby will just die of what seems to the parents to be pneumonia, or failure to thrive, or the child will die for no apparent reason. In terms of congenital heart defects, or kidney defects, or many neurological defects there is no observable sign. And the type of monstrous defect, the Cyclops eye, the lack of arms, all the pictures on the Internet, these are a minor fraction of all the congenital defects that are fatal at birth. Generally the mother is not allowed to see such a baby and she is told it has died. It is the heart defects that make up the majority, and these are only diagnosable in a hospital pediatric unit.
The second problem I know about, since I have designed and carried out several questionnaire epidemiology studies since the pilot one in Carlingford, Ireland in 2000: it is that people can’t remember back even five years, let alone 15 years. And in a situation like Iraq, where having a child with a congenital defect means that you yourself are contaminated and damaged, the likelihood is that you will shortly be dead from cancer and a whole range of illnesses generated by the causes that killed your baby. So the questionnaire study loses cases as you go back in time. The WHO results clearly show this, since the rates they report are actually lower than expected, suggesting that living in Iraq is good for birth outcomes. They seem surprised by this.
So a hospital-based prospective study is the only way. And since this is such a political issue, I said I would only be involved if I could have a hands-on role so that the numbers could be checked, and that was the end of our communication.
The result is very shoddy procedure which would not make it into peer-review. The WHO says that its work and the report was peer-reviewed by senior epidemiologists at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, but if this is true these reviewers should be sent packing. The WHO report fails to refer to any of the studies, like our follow-up papers on uranium in Conflict and Health and the IMANA congenital anomaly rates one. There, for example, we looked at the uranium content along long strands of hair in mothers of birth-defect children and showed that the concentrations increased back to the time of the US attacks.

It is fairly easy to show that the WHO results are ridiculous. There was a previous similar study under Saddam’s regime for the period 1994-1999 which is of interest. This study also was not cited in the WHO report but was discussed in our paper which they must have read. The Iraqi child and maternal mortality survey covered 46,956 births in Iraq from 1994-1999. Results were obtained by questionnaires filled out by the mothers and results were given for all children aged 0-4 who died in 1994-1999. Effects found in this period, if due to environmental agents, would, of course, follow exposures in and following the first Gulf War. Using data presented in the tables in this publication it is easy to show that the results indicated a marked increase in deaths in the first year of life with an infant mortality (0-1) rate of 93 per 1,000 live births. Fifty-six percent of deaths in all the children aged 0-5 occurred in the first month after birth, but since the results were from self-reporting, it was difficult to draw conclusions as to the underlying causes of death except in the case of oncology/hematology. For example, the largest reported proportion of deaths in the neonates were listed as “cough/difficulty breathing” which might result from many different underlying causes. The low rates from congenital malformation reported are hardly credible (Table 1). However, using data published in the report it appeared that the cancer and leukemia death rates in the entire all-Iraq 0-4 group were about three or four times the levels found in Western populations for this age group (Table 1). These rates were three times higher in the south where depleted uranium was employed in the major tank battles near the Kuwait border (53 per 100,000 per year) than in the north (18 per 100,000 per year) where there was less fighting and where depleted uranium was not employed to such an extent. Furthermore, cancer and leukemia rates were highest in the 0-1 year group, which is unusual; the main peak in childhood cancer is generally found at age 4.
Despite all that can be said about the methodology, it is extremely hard to reconcile the WHO study’s finding of an overall congenital anomaly rate of 23.6 with the rate of 147 we found in Fallujah General Hospital, reported by us in. In Table 2, I copy the full results which were submitted in this congenital anomaly paper. It is clear from this that the majority of conditions could not be recognized by mothers of children who died at or shortly after birth. Of 291 babies with congenital abnormalities in our Fallujah hospital study, 113 were cardiovascular, 40 digestive, 9 genitourinary and 44 chromosomal defects, few of which could be recognized as congenital anomalies by mothers, and would need specialized diagnoses in a top hospital to classify.
It is shown in Table 2 that the rate for congenital heart effects alone is twice the rate reported in the WHO study. Of particular concern is the outcome of the “Expert Peer Group” meeting on 27-28 July, 2013, which apparently endorsed this epidemiologically unsafe approach and its results.
I have written and given presentations on scientific dishonesty. The truth can be established by science, but not if it is dishonest and political. And it seems that this report, and the events and decisions that preceded it, and particularly the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine peer review meeting, are a classical example of scientific dishonesty. The use of the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine reminds me of the use of the Royal Society to produce a disgraceful report on depleted uranium in 2001. Since the outcome is intended to exonerate the US and UK military from what are effectively war crimes, and since the result will be employed to defend the continued use of uranium weapons, all concerned in this chicanery should be put before a criminal court and tried for what they have done. Their actions are responsible for human suffering and death and cannot be forgiven. This is a human rights issue. I returned to the issue of Fallujah when I was invited a second time to make a presentation at the UN Human Rights Council in September 2011. I said then it was time to make a legal stand and I presented the human rights petition I had developed with the International Committee for Nuclear Justice. This issue will be taken forward by the Low Level Radiation Campaign in the next six months, so watch this space.
Finally, we should not forget that the WHO signed an agreement in 1959 with the International Atomic Energy Agency to keep their noses out of any research that has a connection with radiation or radioactivity. This agreement is still in force and is a matter of deep concern.
The statements, views and opinions expressed in this column are solely those of the author and do not necessarily represent those of RT.
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Sean McGee (aka Arclight2011 – does anyone reading this know McGee personally
i do!! i admit it.. but i am terribly unsociable..
and a gypsy to boot!!
see my latest videos?
wait till you see the radioactive wood ash video i am doing..
gotta get it tested to find the isotope
more to follow
regards
a sad lonely old git
ps
enenews admin?
am i that good?
hehe!
you know me the best so actually you are my only friend imo
and if you ask nicely maybe the nsa will open up my file for you.. in fact i give them permission..
hehe
ps
busby, very recently has helped me out whilst i was floundering
so he can tbe all that bad.. hes the only person who had some real help for me after “operation sean mcgee” had finished (though it is still ongoing i have access to a decent barrister if things get even crazier and that helps me alot)
i am still documenting for my court case against the corporation that hacked my vodaphone account..
i might point out that all other anti nukers stayed well clear of me as i didnt meet the aims and objectives of their relevant aims and objectives.. so thank you Prof Busby
i probably should do an article on it as he has had some unfair critique imo.
i am sure no one is perfect.. i mean look at tepco!!
regards sean
calling me a liar now!!
i have listed the crime numbers for the hacks and have tried to access some human rights solicitors but had my phone stopped by people unknown.
as to who i am. contact the legal department of the daily mail.. that will show i worked there. then carefully go through my witness statements on the you tube.. you will hear the term “daily mail phone hacking squad ” the same guys that blocked the leveson inquiry, and when you are at the leveson enquiry info, you will see that the police stopped any enquiry into the investigation of corporations,, leveson report is 2000 words but there are some excellent critiques that mention the corporte hacking scandal..
roger you have some strange fixation on busby? do you know him personnaly?
when there is somuch other news you choose to do an mi5 george monbiot attack.. constantly..
without any other major investigations..
well phone or email the daily mail, find out if they were hacked by the police and if they want to admit knowing of me.. ( read levelson report then the critiques and you will see what i am on about..)
are you working for the nsa ? (they recruited 30,000 cyber warriors in march, did they recruit you?
if so ask yer hacker mates who i am..
but tell em to leave my daughters alone or i will take the steps i first threatened when my daughter lost her computer to their games..
now you have some real investigations.
and no dirt on me..
i also worked for richmond council.. contact them too..
i have all this documented on my you tube as you know.. so start investigating..
and no i am not enenews admin.. that was a really stupid statement roger.. get a life and do some research intead of your fixation on busby..
you love DU
Busby hates DU
there is balance
busby does the science better than you and yer radsafe chums imo
at least some of them…
and roger.. you know that i filmed my emails being watched as well as many other things.. you did watch all my videos didnt you??
you are not a digital BOT are you?
lol!
ps the chart is wrong on this post so i have used the correct one and reposted.. suprised you didnt spot that one roger?
hi roger
wood ash in the uk has been a bit hot since chernobyl.. but it depends where one finds it.. the sample i have is hitting at least 500 plus bequerelsfor me to get a reading maybe nearer 1000 bequerels since it doubled the background
at least i have a control sample.. the trees are downwind of la hague btw
and busby may be the son of satan to some but to me he was a light in the darkness.. and i was in a very dark and lonely place indeed
no other anti nukes publicly stepped forward in the UK..
Cowed by TEMPORA (gchq)????
thanks for the reply
the pottasium content is steady as the trees will only take so much of it..
From radsafe forums
“The major concern is not the wood pellets, themselves, but the source of the
contamination. Is there a serious lack of control somewhere?
One theory offered is that this is due to Chernobyl fallout. This is
plausible, and should be investigated.
It’s not about dose, it’s about trust.
________________________________
Sent: Monday, June 15, 2009 9:39:32 AM
Subject: [ RadSafe ] Radioactive wood pellets…
I agree of course with the comments that relate to the lack of quantitative
(meaningful) data for the wood pellets. This far we have not seen any of
that.
I may mention that we had radioactivity levels on a court desk in Sweden
some years ago (it was about releases – Bq values). According to one of my
friends (PhD in the nuclear field, math smart and with very relevant
experience) who was present these lawyers et al. understood nothing about
radiation doses etc but they took a (very) costly decision in the matter.
My personal ideas only,
and this hopeful comment.. my samples come from over 1000 miles from chernobyl but are within La hagues drop zone! , deepending on meteorological conditions of course..
Radiation of Chernobyl blast discovered in Sri Lankan soil
I wonder if chris busby would sample it to get an idea of content, then i could post it to criirad acro, bellona etc for confirmation?
Friday, 19 April 2013 – 01:06 PM
A sample test carried out by the Sri Lankan Atomic Energy Authority has found some acute radioactive particles which were released by the Chernobyl nuclear explosion of Ukraine in Sri Lankan soil.
“If an accident takes place in the Kundankulam Nuclear plant it will directly effect the public within a 50 Kilometre radius. The public will NOT be evacuated in such an instance.
The closest nuclear plant to Sri Lanka is 220 Kilometres, the further the distance the less the impact but if an accident did take place, radioactive material can settle down in the soil in Sri Lanka but this would be in minimal quantities and the risk would be minimal“