A study from Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health that found that the death toll from Hurricane Maria in Puerto Rico was likely much higher than at first thought was the most popular academic paper of 2018, according to the data science company Altmetric.
The Harvard Chan School paper, “Mortality in Puerto Rico after Hurricane Maria,” topped the Altmetric Top 100—a list of the most-mentioned scholarly articles published in the last year. It is also the most widely shared in the Altmetric Top 100’s six-year history.
After Hurricane Maria slammed into Puerto Rico in September 2017, officials initially said that there had been only 16-storm related deaths. But Harvard Chan researchers, along with colleagues in Puerto Rico, estimated that there had actually been between 800 and 8,500 excess deaths related to the hurricane through the end of December 2017.
In a December 11, 2018 article in Research Information, Satchit Balsari, research fellow at the FXB Center for Health and Human Rights and a co-author of the Hurricane Maria paper, said, “Given the large difference in our mortality estimates and the official counts, it was gratifying to see that the media played its role in efficiently translating a scientific paper for mass consumption.”
Caroline Buckee, associate professor of epidemiology at Harvard Chan School, was senior author of the study. Other Harvard Chan authors included Nishant Kishore, Ayesha Mahmud, Mathew Kiang, Arlan Fuller, Jay Lemery, Jennifer Leaning, and Rafael Irizarry.
Another paper in the top 10 of Altmetric’s list also included Harvard Chan co-authors. The study, led by Brigham and Women’s Hospital, found that a diet comprised of roughly 50% of daily calories from carbohydrates was linked with lower risk of early death than both high- and low-carb diets.
Read the Research Information article: Climate crisis and false news top Altmetric 100
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Study estimates a prolonged increase in death rate in Puerto Rico in months following Hurricane Maria (Harvard Chan School release)
Study: For healthiest diet, eat moderate amount of carbs (Harvard Chan School news)