Reprint

Long-Term Health Effects of the 9/11 Disaster

Edited by
November 2019
298 pages
  • ISBN978-3-03921-812-7 (Paperback)
  • ISBN978-3-03921-813-4 (PDF)

This book is a reprint of the Special Issue Long-Term Health Effects of the 9/11 Disaster that was published in

Environmental & Earth Sciences
Medicine & Pharmacology
Public Health & Healthcare
Summary

The terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center towers on September 11, 2001, also referred as 9/11, was an iconic event in US history that altered the global and political response to terrorism. The attacks, which involved two planes hitting the twin towers in Lower Manhattan, New York City, resulted in the collapse of the buildings and over 2800 deaths of occupants of the buildings, fire, police and other responders and persons on the street in the vicinity of the collapsing buildings. The destroyed towers and the surrounding buildings have since been replaced but the health effects that resulted from the release of tons of dust, gases and debris as well as the life threat trauma are ongoing, and represent a major health burden among persons directly exposed. Hundreds of scientific publications have documented the physical and mental health effects attributed to the disaster. The current state-of-the-art in understanding the ongoing interactions of physical and mental health, especially PTSD, and the unique mechanisms by which pollutants from the building collapse, have resulted in long term pulmonary dysfunction, course of previously reported conditions, potential emerging conditions (e.g., heart disease and autoimmune diseases), as well as quality of life, functioning and unmet health care needs would be in the purview of this Special Issue on the 9/11 Disaster.

Format
  • Paperback
License
© 2020 by the authors; CC BY license
Keywords
counseling; post-disaster; psychotherapy; mental health treatment; treatment utilization; World Trade Center; indoor allergens sensitization; asthma quality of life; asthma control; asthma outcomes; mini asthma quality of life questionnaire; asthma morbidity; WTC-related asthma; immunoglobulin E; allergen exposure; WTC attack; respiratory symptoms; lower Manhattan residents; cleaning practices; WTC; fibrotic sarcoid; injury; inflammation; fibrosis; World Trade Center disaster; pulmonary fibrosis; dust; injury; physical health; mental health; World Trade Center disaster; Short Form-12 (SF-12); HQoL; 9/11; 9/11 disaster; handgrip strength; WTC responders; PTSD; depression; aging; 9/11 impact; retirement; chronic disease; PTSD; disaster; income loss; PTSD symptom change; PCL score; longitudinal analysis; PTSD cluster; WTC survivors; 9/11 disaster; obstructive sleep apnea; comorbid insomnia; sleep-related quality of life; chronic sinusitis; sleepiness; WTC responders; thyroid cancer; 9/11 disaster; World Trade Center; surveillance bias; sarcoidosis; World Trade Center (WTC); Scadding stage; lung function; severe lung disease; extrathoracic sarcoidosis; cardiac sarcoidosis; unmet mental health care needs; Asian Americans; World Trade Center attack; disaster; mental health conditions; mental health service use; health insurance; social support; stressful life events; cognitive reserve; cognitive decline; latent class analysis; disaster epidemiology; PTSD; airway physiology; dust; environmental health; forced oscillation; respiratory function; small airway disease; paresthesia; neuropathic symptoms; Cox regression; hazard function; World Trade Center exposure; metabolic syndrome; airway hyperreactivity; World Trade Center; disaster mental health; evidence-based treatment; mental health service utilization; quality improvement; 9/11; screening; thyroid cancer; biomarkers; medical imaging; pulmonary function tests; lung injury; occupational exposure; epidemiological studies; peripheral neuropathy; prevalence; World Trade Center; rescue/recovery workers; occupational exposure; sarcoidosis; World Trade Center; 9/11; genetics; firefighters; FDNY; 9/11 disaster; asthma; trigger(s); air pollution; irritant(s); health-related quality of life; n/a