Analysis of 828 servicemen killed or injured by explosion in Northern Ireland 1970–84: The hostile action casualty system
- 1 October 1989
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in British Journal of Surgery
- Vol. 76 (10), 1006-1010
- https://doi.org/10.1002/bjs.1800761006
Abstract
Death and injury due to terrorist bombings continue to exercise civilian and military surgeons alike. In this paper 828 servicemen killed and injured by explosions in Northern Ireland have been studied, using data stored in the Hostile Action Casualty System (HACS). Because of the nature of the conflict in Northern Ireland, the magnitude of each explosion and the distance of the victims from it are quite accurately known. The overpressure (blast loading) to which the victim was exposed can be estimated from the information on the HACS forms and standard tables, giving overpressures for a given charge at a known distance. Using the HACS data, the numbers of injuries due to overpressure (primary blast injury), missiles energized by the blast (secondary injury), displacement of the victim by the blast wind (tertiary injury) and flash burn can be determined. Of the 828 servicemen involved in explosions, 216 were killed, most of them before any treatment could be instituted. Of the servicemen in the survey, 90 per cent were wearing body armour. Although body armour affords considerable protection from secondary missiles, it is unlikely to reduce the number of deaths due to primary blast injury.Keywords
This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- Biophysics of Impact Injury to the Chest and AbdomenJournal of the Royal Army Medical Corps, 1989
- Casualties from Terrorist BombingsPublished by Wolters Kluwer Health ,1983
- Hunterian Lecture 1980: A Computerised Data Retrieval System for the Wounds of War – The Northern Ireland CasualtiesJournal of the Royal Army Medical Corps, 1981
- EXPERIMENTAL STUDY OF BLAST INJURIES TO THE LUNGSThe Lancet, 1940