NPR

The Hidden Toll Of Conflict On Kids

A new study offers a novel way to measure how many children have really died as a result of conflict in Africa.
A woman from Chad washes her baby at a site for internally displaced persons. They had fled their village after an attack.

Over the last two decades, violent conflicts in Africa have likely resulted in the death of as many as 5 million young children — 3 million of them infants. That's the sobering estimate in a new study published Thursday in the journal The Lancet.

It's also a number that breaks new ground because until now, death statistics regarding war have generally been limited to counting the number of people — including combatants and civilians — who are killed by violence. For children that could mean a bomb falls on, lead author of the study and a professor of medicine at Stanford University:

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