| Literature DB >> 23857161 |
Shannon Doocy1, Amy Daniels, Catherine Packer, Anna Dick, Thomas D Kirsch.
Abstract
Introduction. Population growth and increasing urbanization in earthquake-prone areas suggest that earthquake impacts on human populations will increase in the coming decades. Recent large earthquakes affecting large populations in Japan, Haiti, Chile and New Zealand are evidence of this trend and also illustrate significant variations in outcomes such damage and mortality levels. The objectives of this review were to describe the impact of earthquakes on human populations in terms of mortality, injury and displacement and, to the extent possible, identify risk factors associated with these outcomes. This is one of five reviews on the human impact of natural disasters. Methods. Data on the impact of earthquakes were compiled using two methods, a historical review from 1980 to mid 2009 of earthquake events from multiple databases and a systematic literature review of publications, ending in October 2012. Analysis included descriptive statistics and bivariate tests for associations between earthquake mortality and characteristics using STATA 11. Findings. From 1980 through 2009, there were a total of 372,634 deaths (range 314,634-412,599), 995,219 injuries (range: 845,345-1,145,093), and more than 61 million people affected by earthquakes, and mortality was greatest in Asia. Inconsistent reporting across data sources suggests that the numbers injured and affected are likely underestimates. Findings from a systematic review of the literature indicate that the primary cause of earthquake-related death was trauma due to building collapse and, the very young and the elderly were at increased mortality risk, while gender was not consistently associated with mortality risk. Conclusions. Strategies to mitigate the impact of future earthquakes should include improvements to the built environment and a focus on populations most vulnerable to mortality and injury.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23857161 PMCID: PMC3644288 DOI: 10.1371/currents.dis.67bd14fe457f1db0b5433a8ee20fb833
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Curr ISSN: 2157-3999
* Displacement is excluded from the table because primary data on displacement in earthquake events was collected in only six studies: Daley, 2001; Parasuraman, 1995; Roces, 2002, Chun 2010; Kun 2010; and Milch, 2010. ** Additional articles identified in the hand search conducted through October, 2012.
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| Armenian, 1992 | Dec 7 1988, Armenia | 6.9 | Case-control study of injuries from the 1988 earthquake in Armenia | NR | x |
| Pointer, 1992 | Oct 17 1989, Loma Prieta, California | 7.1 | Retrospective review of medical records after the Loma Prieta earthquake | x | x |
| Roces, 1992 | July 16 1990, Philippines | 7.7 | Unmatched case-control study of those injured/dead from earthquake vs. those uninjured in same neighborhood | x | x |
| Bissell, 1994 | Apr 22 1991,Limon, Costa Rica | 7.4 | Assessment of medical aspects of the disaster response following the 1991 Costa Rica Earthquake | x | x |
| Pretto et al., 1994 | Apr 22 1991,Limon, Costa Rica | 7.4 | Retrospective structured interview to investigate risk injury factors and causes and circumstances of prehospital death after the Costa Rica earthquake in 1991 | x | NR |
| Eberhart-Phillips, 1994 | Oct 17 1989, Loma Prieta, California | 7.1 | Medical record review for all investigated deaths from 7 CA counties for 15 days after the Loma Prieta Earthquake | x | NR |
| Parasuraman, 1995 | Sep 30 1993, Maharashtra India | 6.4 | Quantitative survey assessment of the loss of life and damage to property from the Latur-Osmanabad earthquake in India | x | x |
| Tanida, 1996 | Jan 17 1995,Kobe, Japan | 7.2 | Analysis of mortality from the Hanshin-Awaji earthquake focused on the elderly | x | NR |
| Teeter, 1996 | Jan 17 1994, Northridge California | 6.8 | Evaluation of illnesses and injuries in the aftermath of the Northridge earthquake | NR | x |
| Angus, 1997 | Mar 13 1992, Ercinzan, Turkey | 6.8 | Retrospective medical record review of mortality and its relationship to building collapse patterns and initial medical response following the earthquake | x | x |
| Armenian, 1997 | Dec 7 1988, Armenia | 6.9 | Cohort study of injuries and deaths caused by the Armenian earthquake | x | x |
| Kloner, 1997 | Jan 17 1994, Northridge, California | 6.8 | Population-based analysis of the effect of the Northridge Earthquake on Cardiac Death in Los Angeles County, California | x | NR |
| Kuwagata,1997 | Jan 17 1995,Kobe, Japan | 7.2 | Medical record review of final outcome of patients who suffered trauma in the Hanshin-Awaji earthquake | x | x |
| Peek-Asa, 1998 | Jan 17 1994, Northridge California | 6.8 | Description of fatalities and hospitalized injuries and risk factors from the Northridge earthquake | x | x |
| Salinas, 1998 | Jan 17 1994, Northridge, California | 6.8 | Comparison of emergency department admissions before and after the Northridge earthquake | NR | x |
| Shoaf, 1998 | 1987, 1989 and 1994 California | 5.9, 7.1, 6.8 | Household survey of Californians residents about three earthquakes, and analysis of injuries and socio-demographic predictors | NR | x |
| Tanaka, 1999 | Jan 17 1995,Kobe, Japan | 7.2 | Overview of the morbidity and mortality of hospitalized patients during the 15-day period following the Hanshin-Awaji earthquake | x | x |
| McArthur, 2000 | Jan 17 1994, Northridge California | 6.8 | Evaluation of the burden of injuries resulting in hospitalization in the Northridge Earthquake and the disruption of the usual pattern of service requirements | NR | x |
| Peek-Asa, 2000 | Jan 17 1994, Northridge California | 6.8 | Analysis of earthquake-related and geographic data with the spatial and geographical relationships resulting from fatal and hospitalized injuries during the earthquake | x | x |
| Iskit, 2001 | Aug 17 1999, Marmara Turkey | 7.6 | Retrospective analysis of clinical and laboratory data of pediatric trauma patients referred to a tertiary center after the 1999 Marmara earthquake | NR | x |
| Liang, 2001 | Sep 21 1999, Taiwan | 7.3 | Analysis of risk factors for morbidity and mortality caused by the 1999 Taiwan earthquake | x | x |
| Mahue-Giangreco, 2001 | Jan 17 1994, Northridge California | 6.8 | Evaluation of the associations between potential risk factors for earthquake-related injuries and injury severity from emergency department data from the Northridge earthquake | NR | x |
| Roy, 2002 | Jan 26 2001, India | 7.7 | Survey of victims in a hospital assessing injury and other impacts due to earthquake | NR | x |
| Chan, 2003 | Sep 21 1999, Taiwan | 7.3 | Investigation of earthquake mortality patterns and post-earthquake mortality changes | x | NR |
| Jain, 2003 | Jan 26 2001,Gujarat, India | 7.7 | Description of evolution of presenting injuries in types of pediatric surgery required; propose an effective disaster relief team composition and strategy | NR | x |
| Liao, 2003 | Sep 21 1999,Taiwan | 7.3 | Examination of the association between ground motion and structural destruction that causes fatal injuries from the Taiwan quake. | X | NR |
| Peek-Asa, 2003 | Jan 17 1994 Northridge, California | 6.8 | Population based case-control study to examine how individual characteristics, building characteristics, and seismic features of the earthquake contribute to physical injury. | NR | x |
| Aoki, 2004 | Jan 17 1995,Kobe, Japan | 7.2 | Assessment of death patterns, cause, and preventability and estimates costs of enhancing the emergency medical services response to prevent unnecessary deaths | x | NR |
| Chou, 2004 | Sep 21 1999, Taiwan | 7.3 | Examination of risk factors for mortality from the 1999 Taiwan earthquake | x | NR |
| Ellidokuz, 2005 | Feb 3 2002, Turkey | 6.1 | Cross-sectional study of survivors focusing on risk factors for deaths and non-fatal injuries | x | x |
| Emami., 2005 | Dec 26 2003,Bam, Iran | 6.6 | Discussion of strategies used to manage a large number of casualties entering one hospital in a short period of time, both in an earthquake or other situation | NR | x |
| Pawar, 2005 | Jan 26 2001, India | 7.7 | Examination of casualty rates after the earthquake in the Bhuj block. | X | NR |
| Uzun, 2005 | Aug 17 1999, Marmara, Turkey | 7.6 | Investigation of clinical, demographic, and electromyographic characteristics of 12 pediatric quake victims and compare findings with adults. | NR | x |
| Hatamizadeh, 2006 | Dec 26 2003,Bam, Iran | 6.6 | Review of Bam earthquake epidemiology from a nephrologic perspective; compares complications and outcomes of victims with and without renal failure | x | x |
| Sabzehchian, 2006 | Dec 26, 2003 Bam, Iran | 6.6 | Analysis of pediatric trauma at tertiary-level hospitals following the earthquake | NR | x |
| Dhar et al., 2007 | Oct 8 2005, Pakistan | 7.6 | Medical record review of injuries and deaths of 468 patients admitted to a hospital following the Pakistan earthquake | x | x |
| Laverick, 2007 | Oct 8 2005, Pakistan | 7.6 | Analysis of injuries and deaths among 2721 adults and 1449 children in a hospital after the Pakistan earthquake | x | x |
| Ganjouei, 2008 | Dec 26 2003,Bam, Iran | 6.8 | Retrospective review of medical records of 1250 injured hospital patients seen after the earthquake | NR | x |
| Mohebbi., 2008 | Dec 26, 2003Bam, Iran | 6.6 | Assessment of demographic characteristics, injury, treatment and outcomes of 854 earthquake victims | NR | x |
| Mulvey, 2008 | Oct 8 2005, Pakistan | 7.6 | Retrospective review of medical records to document injury patterns in the first 72 hours after the Kashmir earthquake | x | x |
| Bai, 2009 | Oct 8 2005, Pakistan | 7.8 | Retrospective analysis of injuries of 2194 patients from the Pakistan earthquake | NR | x |
| Doocy, 2009 | Aug 15 2007, Peru | 8.0 | Population-based cluster survey of households affected by earthquake to assess earthquake-related risk and vulnerability | x | x |
| Najafi , 2009 | Dec 26 2003,Bam, Iran | 6.6 | Retrospective analysis of demographic characteristics, biochemical markers and outcomes of individuals referred for medical care after the Bam earthquake | NR | x |
| Sami, 2009 | Oct 8 2005, Pakistan | 7.6 | Random sample of 310 hospital patients to assess demographics and injury types | NR | x |
| Wen, 2009 | May 12 2008, China | 7.9 | Hospital-based case-control study of deaths due to earthquake injuries to assess the determinants of earthquake-related mortality | x | x |
| Xiang, 2009 | May 12 2008, China | 7.9 | Medical record analysis of pediatric victims’ characteristics, injury type, and resuscitation | NR | x |
| Yang, 2009 | May 12 2008, China | 7.9 | Retrospective medical record review of injured patients following the China earthquake | NR | x |
| Yasin, 2009 | Oct 8 2005, Pakistan | 7.6 | Medical record review of injuries, deaths, complications and procedures | x | x |
| Zhang, 2009 | May 12 2008, China | 7.9 | Retrospective record review of demographics and injury from 1170 patients following the China earthquake | NR | x |
| CDC, 2010 | Jan 12 2010, Haiti | 7.0 | Medical record review of injuries and patient characteristics at a field hospital in Haiti | NR | x |
| Jian, 2010 | May 12 2008, Wenchuan China | 7.9 | Retrospective record review of demographic characteristics and injuries of 196 hospital patients | NR | x |
| Milch, 2010 | Aug 15 2007, Peru | 8.0 | Household survey and observational damage assessment to evaluate associations between social and environmental determinants of injury and displacement | NR | x |
| Qiu, 2010 | May 12 2008, China | 7.9 | Medical record review of injury cause, type and treatment and patient demographic characteristics from 11 hospitals | NR | x |
| Sullivan, 2010 | Oct 8 2005, Pakistan | 7.6 | Cross-sectional surveys to assess risk factors for earthquake related mortality | x | NR |
| Farfel, 2011 | Jan 12 2010, Haiti | 7.0 | Analysis of injuries sustained by pediatric patients in a field hospital | NR | X |
| Zhao, 2011 | May 12 2008, China | 8.0 | Review of children treated by the relief team. | X | X |
| Ardagh, 2012 | Feb 22 2011, New Zealand | 6.3 | Data from Christchurch hospital extracted from an electronic database for review. | NR | X |
| Kang, 2012 | April 14 2010, China | 7.1 | Medical records of 3,255 patients from 57 hospitals were analyzed retrospectively. | NR | X |
| Sudaryo, 2012 | Sept 30 2009, Indonesia | 7.6 | Prospective cohort study of inured patients over a 6 month period in Padang, Indonesia. | X | X |
| Tan, 2012 | Sept 30, 2009,Indonesia | 7.6 | Two Singapore Armed Forces (SAF) primary healthcare clinics prospectively collected patient medical information for comparison.. | X | X |
* Additional articles identified in the hand search conducted through October 2012
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| White & Harlow, 1993 | Catalog of human impacts from 51 earthquakes in Central America from 1900-1991 | Upper-crust earthquakes (n=51) caused at least 40,500 deaths, 105,000 injuries and made 900,000 homeless in Central America from 1900-1991. Of earthquakes with magnitude |
| Alexander, 1996 | Review of 83 earthquakes from 1993-1996 | Deaths and injuries occurred in at least 40 and 42 earthquakes, respectively. Most deaths and injuries (86% and 97%, respectively) were caused by earthquakes with 6.5-7.4 magnitude and occurred between midnight and 6 AM (94% and 77%, respectively). Building collapse was the primary cause of death and injury; in 23 earthquakes, running out of doors in panic was mentioned, which can increase risk of injuries and deaths. |
| Musson, 2003 | Review of fatal earthquakes in Britain from 974-2003 | Of the ten fatal earthquakes that occurred in Britain from 974 to 2003, only 10 were directly attributable to the earthquake event. Six were due to falling stones/rock and four due to building damage. There was no correlation between magnitude and mortality. |
| Bird & Bommer, 2004 | Summarizes social and economic losses in 50 earthquakes,1989-2004 | Compared to fault rupture, tsunami, liquefaction, and landslide, ground shaking is the principal cause of damage and loss in earthquakes. Land use, land zoning, improper construction on liquefiable soil, and design and construction are risk factors for injury and death. |
| Srivastava & Gupta, 2004 | Review of timing, after-shocks and magnitude of 503 earthquakes | Earthquake timing and aftershocks are important factors related to earthquake mortality. Earthquakes that occur during the night or early morning cause more deaths than earthquakes that occur during the day. In evening/night earthquakes, mitigation efforts are hampered by decreased visibility, falling debris and electricity outages. Some regions of India are more prone to severe earthquakes than others due to geological location. |
| Fu et al., 2005 | Review of characteristics of 420 shallow, strong earthquakes that were associated with fatalities in China from 1901-2001 | From 1901 to 2001 the majority of earthquakes that caused harm to humans in China were shallow and strong; these earthquakes (n=420) caused at least 604,677 deaths. Most earthquakes with magnitude |
| Gutierrez et al., 2005 | Multivariate analysis of mortality using demographic, seismic and geographic parameters in 366 earthquakes, 1980-2001 | Between 1980 and 2001, 553,000 injuries and 190,000 deaths were reported in 366 earthquakes. A multivariate mortality prediction method was proposed that includes physical and geographic location, human population, GDP per capita, and magnitude. As magnitude increased mortality increased; and as depth increased, mortality decreased. However, high magnitude may not induce high mortality if it is not combined with key physical and demographic criteria. Rural and semi-rural areas with poorly built environments had higher mortality. |
| Spence, 2007 | Review of earthquakes from 1960-2006 focusing on earthquake mortality and affected countries’ earthquake risk mitigation and prevention strategies | Between 1960 and 2006, the ten most lethal earthquakes caused 80% of the 1 million earthquake deaths and occurred in low- and middle-income countries. The main cause of death was building collapse; unreinforced masonry buildings were associated with higher death tolls. Efforts to control and reduce earthquake mortality have made progress in wealthier earthquake prone countries but little or no progress in low- and middle-income countries. Recent experience of a strong earthquake and availability of resources for mitigation were the two strongest determinants of action for risk mitigation. Growing urbanization and populations in developing countries have increased the risk of human impacts. Establishing and implementing building standards is the most important strategy for mortality and injury reduction. |
| Gautschi et al., 2008 | Review of individual and population impacts of major earthquakes from the 20th and 21st centuries and mitigation strategies | Reviews earthquakes with the most deaths and injuries from 20th and 21st century and describes common earthquake injuries and effective treatment approaches. In recent earthquakes mortality was significantly higher in intensive care patients treated in local earthquake-affected hospitals then those treated in unaffected hospitals. In order to minimize trauma-related mortality, knowledge of local medical facilities, equipment, capacity, and transportation infrastructure are important as is a medical transport corridor. |
| Chan et al., 2010 | Review of the human impact of earthquakes in China from 1906-2007 | China has had the greatest human impact from earthquakes of any country in the past century. This review summarizes the mortality tolls from earthquakes in China and other major earthquakes from 1906 to 2007 and identifies gaps in the literature including lack of research on mortality and morbidity risk factors and populations with chronic disease. |
Notes: Best estimate figures are based on the average reported number of deaths or injuries in an event; homeless and affected populations were rarely reported by sources other than EM-DAT thus ranges are not presented.
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| Deaths | 687 | 372,634 | 314,531-412,599 | ||||
| Injuries | 417 | 995,219 | 845,345-1,145,093 | ||||
| Homeless | 376 | 16,003,542 | --- | ||||
| Affected | 688 | 61,521,492 | --- | ||||
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| Reported by EM-DAT | 686 | 93.0% | 2 | 554 | 0-87,476 | ||
| Reported by NOAA | 366 | 49.6% | 9 | 933 | 1-87,652 | ||
| Reported by USGS | 127 | 17.2% | 0 | 1,289 | 0-87,350 | ||
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| Reported by EM-DAT | 324 | 43.9% | 100 | 2,593 | 1-166,812 | ||
| Reported by NOAA | 296 | 40.1% | 60 | 21,614 | 1-374,171 | ||
| Reported by USGS | 69 | 9.4% | 100 | 19,641 | 0-166,836 | ||
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| Reported by EM-DAT | 372 | 50.4% | 0 | 297,140 | 0-5,000,000 | ||
| Reported by | 16 | 2.2% | 46,594 | 970,495 | 328-4,000,000 | ||
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*GINI coefficient scores for income distribution range from 0 to 100 with 0 representing a perfect equality and 100 perfect inequality.
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| 1980-89 | 50 (23.3%) | 69 (26.7%) | 42 (29.2%) | 33 (27.1%) | 0.008 | ||
| 1990-99 | 71 (33.2%) | 82 (32.8%) | 57 (39.6%) | 58 (47.5%) | |||
| 2000-09 | 93 (43.5%) | 107 (41.5%) | 45 (31.3%) | 31 (25.4%) | |||
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| Europe | 64 (29.9%) | 49 (19.0%) | 27 (18.8%) | 16 (13.1%) | 0.001 | ||
| Americas | 38 (17.8%) | 65 (25.2%) | 30 (20.8%) | 21 (17.2%) | |||
| Africa | 6 (2.8%) | 18 (7.0%) | 9 (6.3%) | 7 (5.7%) | |||
| South-East Asia | 25 (11.7%) | 31 (12.0%) | 19 (13.2%) | 27 (22.1%) | |||
| Western Pacific | 54 (25.2%) | 63 (24.4%) | 32 (22.2%) | 24 (19.7%) | |||
| Eastern Mediterranean | 27 (12.6%) | 32 (12.4%) | 27 (18.8%) | 27 (22.1%) | |||
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| Low-income | 14 (6.5%) | 26 (10.1%) | 14 (9.7%) | 18 (14.8%) | 0.026 | ||
| Lower-middle income | 104 (48.6%) | 121 (46.9%) | 73 (50.7%) | 67 (54.9%) | |||
| Upper-middle income | 47 (22.0%) | 69 (26.7%) | 38 (26.4%) | 26 (21.3%) | |||
| High-income | 49 (22.9%) | 42 (16.3%) | 19 (13.2%) | 11 (9.0%) | |||
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| Mean (SD) | 39.3 (6.4) | 41.2 (8.0) | 41.3 (7.6) | 41.0 (7.0) | 0.0241 | ||
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| Mean (SD) | 11,777.1(14,911.8) | 8975.9 (12,854.8) | 7387.1 (10969.7) | 6,058 (10,487.3) | 0.0013 | ||
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| Mean (SD) | 22.9 (21.1) | 30.2 (33.3) | 25.5 (25.6) | 27.9 (34.1) | 0.2228 | ||
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| Mean (SD) | 5.9 (0.7) | 6.3 (0.6) | 6.2 (0.8) | 6.7 (0.7) | <0.001 | ||
*Reference is ‘no deaths’ for all categories (n=55) **Model includes both magnitude and focal depth; focal depth is measured on a log (base 10) scale ***p-values reported for each category with Wald test p-values for the variable.
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| RRR (95 CI) | p-value | RRR (95 CI) | p-value | RRR (95 CI) | p-value*** | |
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| 1980-89 |
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| 0.027 | ||
| 1990-99 | 1.03 (0.42, 2.56) | 0.947 | .98 (.36, 2.42) | 0.907 | 0.52 (0.19, 1.44) | 0.21 |
| 2000-09 | 0.98 (.42,2.32) | 0.97 | 0.46 (0.18, 1.16) | 0.10 | 0.19 (0.06, 0.55) |
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| Africa |
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| Europe | <0.001 (0,0) | <0.001 | <0.001 (0,0) | <0.001 | <0.001 (0,0) | <0.001 |
| Americas | <0.001 (0,0) | <0.001 | <0.001 (0,0) | <0.001 | <0.001 (0,0) | <0.001 |
| South-East Asia | <0.001 (0,0) | <0.001 | <0.001 (0,0) | <0.001 | <0.001 (0,0) | <0.001 |
| Western Pacific | <0.001 (0,0) | <0.001 | <0.001 (0,0) | <0.001 | <0.001 (0,0) | <0.001 |
| E Mediterranean | <0.001 (0,0) | <0.001 | <0.001 (0,0) | <0.001 | <0.001 (0,0) | <0.001 |
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| 1.10 (0.99, 1.20) |
| 1.04 (0.95, 1.15) | 0.156 | 1.11 (0.99, 1.24) | 0.058 |
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| 1.01 (.97, 1.05) | 0.646 | .98 (.93, 1.02) | 0.302 | 1.00 (.95, 1.05) | 0.97 |
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| 1.82 (.57,5.9) | 0.314 | .58 (.16, 2.05) | 0.394 | .38 (0.09, 1.58) | 0.184 |
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| 2.8 (1.39, 5.62) |
| 3.99 (1.9, 8.3) |
| 11.93 (5.35, 26.57) |
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| Angus, 1997 | Turkey, 1992 | Not reported | 48% (n=26) instant/building collapse. Of protracted deaths, 50% (n=13) hemorrhaged and 42% (n=11) asphyxiated. | Not reported | Not reported | 92% of indoor deaths occurred in mid-level unreinforced masonry buildings; deaths were more likely among those on the ground floor. Prior first-aid or rescue training of lay, uninjured survivors was associated with a higher likelihood of rescue and resuscitation. |
| Aoki, 2004 | Japan, 1995 | Not reported | Asphyxia/pressure, 74% (n=3551); contusion injury, 17% (n= 828); head/neck injury, 8% (n=286); indirect, 3% (n=121). | Not reported | Not reported | Not reported |
| Armenian, 1997 | Armenia, 1988 | 254/10,000 | Trauma due to building collapse. | Not reported | Increased deaths among >60yrs. | Building height and upper floor location were important predictors of death; odds of death were 9.8 times greater for those inside compared witho those outside. |
| Bisselll, 1994 | Costa Rica, 1991 | Not reported | Entrapment and crush injury. | Not reported | Not reported | Most fatalities occurred in homes; wood-frame houses with lateral bracing were less likely to collapse than those without bracing. |
| Chan, 2003 | Taiwan, 1999 | 134/10,000 | 77% (n=1,441) instant/building collapse; causes asphyxiation (32%), intracranial inj (29%), trauma/ trunk/extremity inj (16%), internal inj (7%), crush inj (6%), and fractures (6%). | Male: 122/10,000; Female: 144/10,000. Ratio: 0.85:1.0 | Increased risk w/ age; death ratio of >45yrs to adults <45yrs of 3.3:1. | Complete collapse was a better predictor of death than partial collapse; a 1% increase in completely collapsed home was associated with a 5% increase in the crude death rate. |
| Chou, 2004 | Taiwan, 1999 | Not reported | Not reported | Increased female risk: OR 1.2 (CI: 1.1-1.3) | Higher mortality in older age groups. | People with lower socioeconomic status and the physically disabled were at increased risk of mortality. |
| Doocy, 2009 | Peru, 2007 | 1.4/1000 | Not reported | Not reported | Sample size too small for analysis | Not reported |
| Eberhart-Phillips,1994 | California, 1989 | Not reported | Elevated freeway collapse; 81% (46/57) of direct deaths vehicle /roadway related. Indirect deaths due to CO poisoning, heart attacks, falls and GI bleeding. | Victims more likely to be female (NS) | Victims more likely to be older (NS) | Elevated freeway collapse |
| Ellidokuz, 2005 | Turkey, 2002 | 1.6/10,000 | Not reported | Not reported | Median age = 51 yrs (range 4-74) | Collapsed (11 deaths) and severely damaged (2 deaths) buildings. |
| Hatamizadeh, 2006 | Iran, 2003 | 19.7% (41/2086 patients) | Trauma (n=11), cardiac arrest (n=6), septicemia (n=5), DIC (n=3), hypovolemic shock (n=2), and ARDS (n=3) | Not reported | Mean age = 32.3 yrs (SD=16.3) | Patients with acute renal failure were significantly more likely to die than those with other diagnoses. |
| Kuwagata, 1997 | Japan, 1995 | 6.6%(178 /2702 injuries) | Crush syndrome (n=50, 28%), vital organ injuries (n=36, 20%), 7 (1%); fractures of the pelvis or spine (n=7, 1%); others (n=18, 1.3%); and unknown (n=67, 59%) | Not reported | Not reported | The most life-threatening injuries, crush syndrome and vital organ injuries, occurred indoors. |
| Laverick, 2007 | Pakistan, 2007 | Adults: 4.3% (118/ 2721) Children 3.5% (50/ 1449 patients) | Tetanus (n=22) deaths and neonatal causes (n=4); no other causes reported | Not reported | Not reported | Not reported |
| Liang, 2001 | Taiwan, 1999 | 14.82/100,000 | Body compression, including head injury (32%), shock (29%) and asphyxiation (29%). Other causes included organ injury, spinal cord injury, burns and CO poisoning. | Male:14.0/100,000 Female:15.6/100,000 Ratio:1.11 (NS) | >80yrs 80/100,00070-79yrs 50/100,000 20-29yrs 6.9/100,000 0-9yrs 12.7/100,000. | Distance to epicenter; earthquake intensity, age, population density, and physicians and hospital beds per 10,000 population were all significant predictors of mortality. |
| Liao, 2003 | Taiwan, 1999 | Not reported | Not reported | Male:10.7/100,000 Female:10.1/100,000 Ratio: 1.05(NS) | <15yr:8.5/100,00015-64:8.4/100,000 65+: 34.8/100,000 | Overall building collapse rate was a better predictor of mortality than partial building collapse. Intensity and distance to the epicenter were positively associated with mortality. |
| Mulvey, 2008 | Pakistan, 2008 | 0.2% (2/1502 patients) | Head injuries | Not reported | Not reported | Not reported |
| Parasuraman, 1995 | India, 1993 | Not reported | Building collapse | More females than males died in all adult age groups. | By age grp: <14, 50%; 15-24, 13%; 25-59, 28%; 60+, 11%. | Homes with mud/stone walls suffered the most damage (~90% collapsed); fewer deaths occurred in mud/thatch homes and in stone/mud/concrete homes. |
| Pawar, 2005 | India, 2001 | Not reported | Not reported | Not reported | By age group: 0-14, n=171 (62%); 14-19, n=41 (15%), adults, n=45 (16%); older adults, n=19 (7%). | The death rate was significantly associated with distance to epicenter. |
| Peek-Asa, 1998 | California, 1994 | 19.3% (33/ 171 injured) | Asphyxia and body compression from building collapse (n=22, 71%); vehicle accidents (n=5, 15%); falls (n=4, 12%). | Not reported | 31% of the deceased were >65 yrs. | Most fatalities were caused by a structural failure (n=25, 76%); >66% of fatalities involved a structural failure of the home. Earthquake related motor vehicle injuries were 5 times more likely to result in fatality than a hospitalized injury. |
| Peek-Asa, 2000 | California, 1994 | 22.6% (30/ 133 injured patients) | Not reported | Not reported | Not reported | Fatal injuries were concentrated near the epicenter and in areas with higher peak ground acceleration. |
| Pointer, 1992 | California, 1989 | 1.3/100,000 (CMR) | Not reported | Not reported | Not reported | Not reported |
| Pretto,1994 | Costa Rica, 1991 | 4/10,000 | 92% (n=45) instant deaths due building collapse/crush syndrome | Not reported | Not reported | People inside wood frame buildings had a higher risk of injury and death than people in other building types (OR 22.5, p<.001). |
| Roces, 1992 | Philippines, 1990 | 19% among the injured (68/363) | Not reported | Not reported | Not reported | Cases were more likely to be inside concrete/mixed materials rather buildings as compared to wood (OR 2.6, CI 1.7-4.1) and on a middle or upper floor (OR 3.4, CI:2.2-5.5 and OR 1.9, CI 1.3-2.9, respectively). Chance of survival decreased as time of rescue increased: 84% of the survivors were rescued within the first hour. |
| Sullivan, 2010 | Pakistan, 2005 | 1.7-5.4% in camps/ communities (708 deaths) | Not reported | Higher Death rate among females (NS) | Children <5 (1.2-10.6% CMR) and adults >50 (3.2-9.9% CMR) had highest risk | Not reported |
| Tanaka, 1999 | Japan, 1995 | 8.6% (527/ 6107 patients) | Crush injuries (n=50). Indirect causes included respiratory (n=110) and cardiovascular (n=56). | Not reported | Increased with age in patients with prior injuries and illness. | Not reported |
| Tanida, 1996 | Japan, 1995 | Not reported | Crush injuries (77%); also penetrating injuries and burns. | Among those >60yrs, female fatalities were 2 times greater than males. | >50% of deaths among those >60; the death rate of 80+yrs was 6 times that of <50yrs. | Not reported |
| Wen, 2009 | China, 2008 | NA – case control study | Not reported | Not reported | Not reported | Traumatic brain injury, multiple system organ failure, prior disease, and infection significantly associated w/ increased death risk |
| Yasin, 2009 | Pakistan, 2005 | 1.9% (17/862 patients) | Tetanus (n=7), trauma/ sepsis (n=5), spinal injury n=(2), crush syndrome (n=2), head injury (n=1) | Not reported | Not reported | Not reported |
| Zhao, 2011 | China, 2008 | 7 deaths | 4 patients with open-head injury, 3 had severe crush injury. | Not reported | Not reported | Not reported |
| Kang, 2012 | China, 2010 | 0.2% (7/3255) | Four patients died from earthquake-related injuries and three from other illnesses. | Not reported | Not reported | Not reported |
Notes: Peek-Asa 2000 and Laverick, 2007 reported detailed information on injury but are excluded from the table because no information was reported on factors included in the table. In many cases reporting by injury type, age, and/or sex was incomplete which is why numbers reported for each outcome may not sum to the total number of deaths reported.
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| Angus, 1997 | Turkey, 1992 | 29 | Not reported | NR | NR | NR | NR | Not reported |
| Armenian, 1992 | Armenia, 1988 | 189 | Not reported | 120 | 63% | 69 | 37% | Descriptive only |
| Armenian, 1997 | Armenia, 1988 | 1454 | Fractures/broken bones (37%) and crush injuries (27%) were most common | 658 | 45% | 796 | 55% | Not reported |
| Bai, 2009 | Pakistan, 2005 | 2194 | Open wounds (68%), soft tissue (20%), and fractures (18%), most often in lower extremity; infection was common. | 166 | 60% | 109 | 40% | Descriptive only |
| Bissell, 1994 | Costa Rica, 1991 | 182 | Crush injuries, long bone fractures and soft tissue injuries were most common | NR | NR | NR | NR | Not reported |
| CDC, 2010 | Haiti, 2010 | 126 | Fractures/dislocations, wound infections, and head, face, and brain injuries were most common. | 74 | 46% | 85 | 53% | Descriptive; young adults were most at risk |
| Dhar, 2007 | Pakistan, 2005 | 468 | Fractures/broken bones (58%), soft tissue only (35%), chest trauma (5%), spine injuries (4%), and others (2%). | 271 | 58% | 197 | 42% | Descriptive only |
| Doocy, 2009 | Peru, 2007 | 92 | Crush injuries (31%), fractures (23%), wounds (20%), other types (18%), and blunt force injury (8%) were most common. | 2% | 3% | Injury risk increased by 3% per additional year of age. | ||
| Ellidokuz, 2005 | Turkey, 2002 | 18 | 18 injured persons, including 4 with fractures/broken bones and 1 burn patient all had lacerations or contusions. | 9 | 50% | 9 | 50% | Descriptive only |
| Emami, 2005 | Iran, 2003 | 708 | Lacerations/contusions (27%), fractures/broken bones (20%), and crush syndrome (4%) were most common. | 392 | 55% | 316 | 45% | Descriptive only |
| Farfel, 2011 | Haiti, 2010 | 182 | Open wounds (29%), fractures (26%), crush injuries (16%), superficial injuries (16%), contusions (4%), dislocations (3%), and head injuries (3%) were most common. | NR | NR | NR | NR | Descriptive only |
| Ganjouei, 2008 | Iran, 2003 | 1250 | Lower limb (41%), pelvis (26%) and head injuries (25%) were most common among hospitalized patients in the study. | 223 | 54% | 193 | 46% | Risk of injury was highest among 19-60yrs of age and very low among children |
| Hatamizadeh, 2006 | Iran, 2003 | 2086 | Trauma to extremities (36%), head/neck (16%), abdomen (16%), and thorax (9%). | 1079 | 52% | 966 | 46% | Significantly lower injury risk for those <15 yrs (p<.001) and higher risk for young/ middle-aged adults (p<.001). |
| Iskit, 2001 | Marmara Turkey, 1999 | 33 | Crush injuries/syndrome (45%), and fractures/broken bones (24%) were most common. | 17 | 52% | 16 | 48% | Not significant |
| Jain, 2003 | India, 2001 | 62 | Orthopedic injury (42%), soft tissue injury (10%), and burns (6%). | NR | NR | NR | NR | Descriptive only |
| Jian, 2010 | China, 2008 | 196 | Multiple trauma (36%), and lower limb injury (34%) were the most common. | 88 | 45% | 108 | 55% | Descriptive only |
| Kuwagata, 1997 | Japan, 1995 | 2702 | Fractures/broken bones (45%), soft tissue injury (33%), crush syndrome (14%), burns (2%), nerve injuries (2%), other (2%) and unknown (4%). | NR | NR | NR | NR | Not reported |
| Liang, 2001 | Taiwan, 1999 | 8722 | 90% suffered from head injury, open wounds, contusions or fractures | NR | NR | NR | NR | Not reported |
| Mahue-Giangreco, 2001 | California, 1994 | 418 | Not reported | 167 | 40% | 251 | 60% | Risk of injury increased with age category (NS); risk of injury was 6 times greater in patients 60+yr compared 30-39yr |
| McArthur, 2000 | California, 1994 | 138 | Not reported | NR | NR | NR | NR | Significantly lower risk among children and higher risk among adults >65yrs |
| Milch, 2010 | Peru, 2007 | --- | Not reported | NR | NR | NR | NR | Not reported |
| Mohebbi, 2008 | Iran, 2003 | 854 | Fractures of the lower extremities most common (25%) | 467 | 55% | 387 | 45% | Descriptive only |
| Mulvey, 2008 | Pakistan, 2005 | 1502 | Lacerations (65%), fractures (22%), and soft tissue (6%). | 262 | 56% | 206 | 44% | Descriptive only; highest among young adults |
| Nadjafi, 1997 | Iran, 1990 | 495 | Crush syndrome 6% | NR | NR | NR | NR | Not reported |
| Parasuraman, 1995 | India, 1993 | 9082 | Minor injuries (47%). Among 4803 in-patients: upper limb (24%), head (18%), spinal (9%), lower limb (14%), paralysis (7%), multiple fractures (3%), eye (3%) and other (23%). | NR | NR | NR | NR | Not reported |
| Peek-Asa et al, 1998 | California, 1994 | 171 | Causes: falls (56%), hit/trapped (23%), burned/electrocuted (7%), cut/pierced (5%), vehicle accidents (3%), other (6%). | 78 | 46% | 93 | 54% | Injury rates increased significantly with age; trend was more pronounced for hospitalized injuries. |
| Peek-Asa et al, 2003 | California, 1994 | 103 | Not reported | 36 | 35% | 67 | 65% | Among adults, risk of injury increased by 1.3 (CI: 1.1-1.6) per every 10yrs in age. |
| Pocan et al, 2002 | Turkey, 1999 | 630 | Crush syndrome (5%), upper extremity (5%), lower extremity (8%), multiple extremities (2%). | NR | NR | NR | NR | Not reported |
| Pointer et al, 1992 | California, 1989 | 1082 | Minor injuries (59%), fractures/broken bones (17%), sprains/dislocations (15%), head injuries 4%. | NR | NR | NR | NR | Not reported |
| Qui, 2010 | 3401 | Causes: blunt strike (68%), crush/burying (19%) and slip/falling (13%). Extremity injuries (55%) and fractures accounted (53%) were most common. | 1684 | 50% | 1713 | 50% | Descriptive only | |
| Roces et al, 1992 | Philippines, 1990 | 363 | Contusions (30%), abrasions (16%), fractures/broken bones (16%), lacerations (12%). 56% had injured extremities. Causes: falling debris (34%), entrapment (30%), falls (16%), and landslides (10%). | NR | NR | NR | NR | Not reported |
| Roy, 2002 | India, 2001 | 283 | Spine/pelvis (17%), upper extremity (13%), chest/abdominal trauma (<4%), crush syndrome (<2%). | 125 | 44% | 158 | 56% | Descriptive only |
| Sabzehchian, 2006 | Iran, 2003 | 119 | Lacerations/contusions (51%), fractures/broken bones (53%), head injuries (31%) | 59 | 50% | 60 | 50% | Descriptive only |
| Salinas et al, 1998 | California, 1994 | 329 | Lacerations/contusions accounted for 50% of injuries. | NR | NR | NR | NR | Descriptive only |
| Sami, 2009 | Pakistan, 2005 | 298 | Bone injuries (41%), soft tissue injuries (36%), mixed injuries (23%). | 137 | 46% | 161 | 54% | Descriptive; injuries concentrated in <30 population but older adults face increased risk |
| Shoaf et al, 1998 | California, 1987, 1989, 1994 | 183 | Falling debris, physical force of earthquake, and falls caused most injuries. | 65 | 36% | 118 | 64% | Mixed: Injured respondents were significantly older in Loma Prieta and significantly younger in Northridge. |
| Tanaka et al, 1999 | Japan, 1995 | 2718 | Fractures/broken bones (55%), lacerations/contusions (35%), crush injury (12%), peripheral nerve injury (5%); and burns (2%). | NR | NR | NR | NR | Morbidity rates increased with age |
| Teeter, 1996 | California, 1994 | --- | Of all care seekers, 9% reported earthquake-related musculoskeletal injuries, and 3% lacerations/contusions. | NR | NR | NR | NR | Descriptive only |
| Uzun, 2005 | Turkey, 1999 | 75 | Crush injury (19%) and fractures/broken bones (15%) | 34 | 45% | 41 | 55% | Descriptive only |
| Wen, 2009 | China, 2008 | 36 | Not reported | NR | NR | NR | NR | Not reported |
| Xiang, 2009 | China, 2008 | 119 | Fractures were the most common injury type followed by soft tissue injuries. | 58 | 49% | 61 | 51% | Descriptive only |
| Yang, 2009 | China, 2008 | 533 | The most common injuries were limb and pelvis (59%), soft tissue (39%) and chest (21%). | 234 | 44% | 299 | 56% | Descriptive only |
| Yasin, 2009 | Pakistan, 2005 | 1698 | Poly-trauma with the most common major injuries being fracture and soft tissue related. | NR | NR | NR | NR | Not reported |
| Zhang, 2009 | China, 2008 | 1723 | Lower limb (36%) and head injuries (18%) were most common. | 848 | 48% | 922 | 52% | Descriptive only |
| Zhao, 201169 | China, 2008 | 192` | Distribution of pediatric injuries: limb 106 (55.2%); body surface 67 (34.9%); head 23 (12%); chest 18 (9.4%); spine 17 (8.9%); pelvis 13 (6.8%); abdomen 6 (3.1%); and face/neck 6 (3.1%). | NR | NR | NR | NR | Not reported |
| Ardagh 201269 | New Zealand, 2011 | 6659 | The most common types of injuries included: Lumbar sprain 721, Neck sprain 531, Sprain of shoulder and upper arm 297, Contusion, knee and lower leg 260, Rotator cuff sprain 205, Ankle sprain 204, Thoracic sprain 140, Open leg wound 140, Contusion, shoulder or upper arm 138, Dental injuries 136 | 2032 | 31% | 4627 | 69% | Injury rates were highest among middle age adults (40-59 yrs) at 21%. Lower injury rates were observed in children and older adults. |
| Kang, 201270 | China, 2010 | 2622 | Bone fractures were diagnosed in 1,431 (55.1%) patients and crush syndrome was observed in 23 (0.9%). | 1330 | 51% | 1268 | 49% | 1,426 (43.8%) were middle-aged (31 |
| Sudaryo, 201271 | Indonesia, 2009 | 184 | Bruises (41%), bone fracture and/or dislocation (39%) were the most predominant types of injury. The extremities (both upper and lower) were the most affected part of the injured body (81%). | 53 | 29% | 131 | 71% | Not reported |
| Tan, 201272 | Indonesia, 2009 | 113 | 55% of emergency department patients had a trauma-related diagnosis. | 66 | 58% | 47 | 42% | Not reported |