Department of Psychiatry, Mount Sinai School of Medicine, USA
Department of Community Medicine, Mount Sinai School of Medicine, USA
Department of Community Medicine, Mount Sinai School of Medicine, USA
Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Child and Adolescent Mental Health Service, Ladyfield Offices, Glencaple Road, Dumfries, Scotland DG1 4TE, email: simon.munro{at}nhs.net
New York University School of Medicine and President of the American National Alliance on Mental Illness, USA
Department of Psychiatry, Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York, USA
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To establish the prevalence of, and risk factors for, psychiatric symptoms in Ground Zero ironworkers. Questionnaires commonly used to screen for psychiatric symptoms were completed by 124 workers.
RESULTS
We have established the prevalence of screening positive for symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder, panic attacks, generalised anxiety, depression and alcohol misuse. Among the risk factors were alcohol misuse, injury to or death of a family member, friend or co-worker at Ground Zero and one or more adverse life events since 9/11.
CLINICAL IMPLICATIONS
Ironworkers at Ground Zero tend to have significant psychiatric symptoms likely to be associated with the traumatic experience of working there during the clean-up operation. Risk factors for psychiatric symptoms were established.
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Apart from the individual screening instruments, the screening questionnaire also asked about the participants gender, age, marital status, alcohol use since 9/11, injury to and/or death of family members, friends or co-workers on 9/11 and about 14 predetermined negative life events in the 12 months after 9/11. The events the participants could choose from were: the loss of job or income, house move, divorce from spouse, end of relationship with partner or best friend, domestic violence, mechanical car trouble, personal theft, a victim of mugging/violent attack, debt, serious illness and/or injury, criminal record, family illness, family death and serious family illness or death in the 6 months after 9/11. Threshold scores were used for each of the individual screening instruments (Mayfield et al, 1974; Ewing, 1984; Bush et al, 1987; Goldberg & Williams, 1988; Liscow et al, 1995; Spitzer et al, 1999): 43 out of 85 established scores for the PCL, 1 out of 4 for the CAGE questionnaire, 8 out of 15 for the PHQ–1, 4 out of 7 in the PHQ–2 and 5 out of 9 on the PHQ–3.
We used an internet-based statistical analysis package (Cantrell, 2003) for Fishers exact test to establish statistical significance when risk factors for psychiatric symptoms were compared between the participants and the comparison group. To calculate P-values more accurately, we used Yates continuity correction and two-tailed P-values.
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Demographic characteristics
All but one ironworker who attended the medical centre were male
(n=123, 99.2%). Their mean age was 38 years (range 20–62,
median 43) and the majority (n=87, 70.2%) were in a relationship at
the time of attendance.
PCL and PHQ
Less than a fifth of the participants (n=23, 18.5%) screened
positive on the PCL: 3.2% (n=4) screened positive for panic attack
symptoms (PHQ–1), 6.5% (n=8) for generalised anxiety disorder
symptoms (PHQ–2) and 5.7% (n=7) for depressive symptoms
(PHQ–3).
CAGE questionnaire and alcohol use
About two-thirds of the participants (n=84, 67.7%) drank alcohol;
44% (n=37) have had a period since 9/11 when they have been drinking
more than usual, 36.2% (n=17) while working at Ground
Zero and 63.8% (n=30) after leaving their work at the site. Of the
participants who drank alcohol, 39.3% (n=33) screened positive on the
CAGE questionnaire.
Risk factors for psychiatric symptoms in individual screening instruments
Marital status
Relationship status was not a risk factor for screening positive on any
individual screening instrument.
Alcohol use and misuse
A period of excessive alcohol use at any time since 9/11 was a significant
risk factor for screening positive on the PCL (P=0.0082) and CAGE
questionnaire (P=0.0001).
Injury to or death of a family member, friend or co-worker on 9/11
None of the participants suffered personal injury on 9/11. Injury to a
family member, friend or co-worker on 9/11 was a risk factor for screening
positive on the PCL (P=0.0318). Forty-seven participants (37.9%) lost
a family member, friend or co-worker on 9/11, which was also a risk factor for
screening positive on the PCL (P=0.0168) and CAGE questionnaire
(P=0.0011).
Life events in the12 months after 9/11
Comparing those who had not experienced any of the 14 life events as stated
in the questionnaire in the 12 months after 9/11 with those who had
experienced one or more events, experiencing one or more life events was a
risk factor for screening positive on the PCL (P=0.0125).
We also compared those who had experienced zero or one life event since 9/11 and those who had experienced two or more and found that the latter was a risk factor for screening positive on the PCL (P=0.0028) and PHQ–3(P=0.0065).
When comparing those who had experienced less than four life events since 9/11 and those who had experienced four or more, the latter was found to be a risk factor for screening positive on the PCL (P=0.0259), CAGE (P=0.0064) and PHQ–3(P=0.0513).
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When compared with the 12-month prevalence rates of psychiatric symptoms in the general population of adult Americans, all but the depression rates are higher in the ironworkers. The rates in the general population are: 3.5% for post-traumatic stress disorder, 2.7% for panic disorder, 3.1% for generalised anxiety disorder, 6.7% for major depressive disorder, 3.1% for alcohol misuse and 1.3% for alcohol dependence (Kessler et al, 2005). This implicates that there is a causal relationship between psychiatric symptoms and the traumatic experience of working at Ground Zero during the clean-up operation, although the current study establishes only the prevalence of significant symptoms of these disorders, using the threshold scores of screening instruments, as opposed to the DSM–IV diagnosed prevalence of these disorders in the general population.
Excessive alcohol use since 9/11, injury to and/or death of a friend, family member or co-worker on 9/11 and at least one life event in the 6 months after 9/11 were statistically significant risk factors for psychiatric symptoms – those participants consistently screened positive in the individual screening instruments, primarily in the PCL and CAGE questionnaire. In the ironworker group, the prevalence of the death of a friend, family member or coworker on 9/11 was 37.9% compared with 20% in the general population. Participants of the World Trade Centre Mental Health Screening Program suggested that this was because many of their colleagues working in Manhattan and Brooklyn on 9/11 flocked to the Ground Zero site when the first of the two towers had collapsed to assist in rescuing survivors. However, they were killed when the second of the two towers collapsed. It is possible that this high prevalence of death or injury to friends, family members and co-workers has increased the risk of subsequent psychiatric illness in participants.
Comparing the results with other studies
Although some studies have found lower rates of post-traumatic stress
disorder symptoms in exposed members of the general population after disasters
(Streimer et al,
1985; Corneil et al,
1999; Trout et al,
2002) others have found those rates to be greater
(Kessler et al, 1995;
Wagner et al, 1998;
North et al,
2002a; Schlenger
et al, 2002; Silver
et al, 2002). This variation is likely caused by a number
of variables, including the degree and duration of exposure, diagnostic
stringency, the duration between locus event and the study, selection
criteria, past psychiatric history, comorbidity and a number of other
confounding variables.
Considerably more problems with alcohol misuse were identified in the current study than in the one comparable study of 181 firefighters involved in the clean-up operation after the Oklahoma City Bombing in 1995 (North et al, 2002a). This may be attributed to the low threshold score for screening positive in the current study, but may also be caused by differences between ironworkers and the firefighters studied. Ironworkers taking part in the study anecdotally reported the industry as having a culture of socialisation involving excessive alcohol use outside work. They have also admitted to be generally disinclined to focus on or communicate their emotions, potentially placing them at increased risk of harmful alcohol use or developing alcohol dependence.
Risk factors in comparable studies
Some of the risk factors identified in the current study have also been
observed in previous studies: loss of a loved one and
unemployment after the traumatic event in Bryant & Harvey
(1995); significant
loss and injury in McFarlane
(1988); subsequent
traumatic events in Carlier et al
(1997) and Galea et al
(2002); alcohol use and
functional impairment in North et al
(2002b); and
chronic pain or injury in Asmundson et al
(1998).
Can the psychiatric symptoms be prevented?
Results of this study may help in planning preventive measures for future
disaster scenarios. For example, observation and intervention could be focused
on those ironworkers who use alcohol excessively, those whose family member,
friend or co-worker was injured or killed in the disaster, or those who
experience in the 12 months after the disaster one or more life events as
specified in the screening questionnaire.
Limitations
Ironworkers who attended the World Trade Center Mental Health Screening
Program were either selected by their union or volunteered. As this was based
on perceived need or desire for mental healthcare, it caused a selection bias.
The ironworkers alleged disinclination to focus on or communicate their
emotions may have prevented some of them from attending the programme, thus
missing those who potentially could have screened positive for psychiatric
symptoms. The over-representation of White males in the group does not reflect
the New York demographics and therefore the results cannot be generalised to
the US population. However, these proportions do represent the predominance of
males in the wider ironworker population.
The individual screening instruments used in the screening questionnaire, although useful for screening for psychiatric symptoms, do not provide a psychiatric diagnosis. Therefore, it has not been possible in our study to establish the prevalence of mental illness among ironworkers as a result of working at Ground Zero.
Using those who screened negative for psychiatric symptoms as the comparison group may have introduced a number of confounding factors not corrected for such as past or family psychiatric history.
The significant delay between 9/11 and attendance at the screening programme could introduce the confounding variable of psychiatric symptoms arising which are unrelated to the experience of working at Ground Zero. By the same token, the delay allowed to assess whether life events experienced in the 12 months since 9/11 were one of the causes of psychiatric illness.
Risk factors for psychiatric morbidity were established by showing a statistically significant correlation between two variables that are likely, but not proven, to be related. Statistical analyses with adjustments for confounding variables were not undertaken.
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