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Release Date: Oct. 22, 2004
NEW YORKERS’ MENTAL HEALTH VISITS ROSE LITTLE AFTER 9/11
By Susan Farrer, Contributing Writer
Health Behavior News Service
New Yorkers’ use of mental health services rose only
slightly during the year after the September 11, 2001, World Trade Center
attacks compared
with the year before the attacks, a recent study suggests. But the number of
mental health visits among people already receiving treatment increased after
the attacks.
The study is one of the few to look at long-term use of community mental health
services within a population after a major catastrophic event, say Joseph A.
Boscarino, Ph.D., M.P.H., and colleagues at the New York Academy of Medicine
and Florida State University. Their findings appear in the journal General
Hospital Psychiatry.
“Following the World Trade Center attacks, mental health service providers
geared up to provide mental health services for thousands of New Yorkers potentially
affected by this event,” Boscarino says. “This major increase in
utilization, however, never really materialized.”
The investigators conducted telephone surveys with 2,368 English- and Spanish-speaking
adults who lived in New York City at the time of the attacks to learn about
their post-disaster mental health service and medication use. Two different
surveys were used: one of a cross-section of city residents and the other of
persons who reported receiving mental health treatment within a year after
the attacks.
Residents were queried about their use of counseling for “problems with
emotions or nerves or use of alcohol or drugs,” and their use of prescription
medications such as antidepressants, tranquilizers or sleeping pills for emotional
problems. The researchers also asked questions to assess participants’ experience
with post-traumatic stress disorder, depression, psychological distress and
other mental health problems.
Less than 9 percent of New York City residents said they made more mental
health visits and 4 percent made fewer visits during the year after the September
11 disaster, compared with the year before the disaster. In addition, only
about 4 percent of residents increased their psychotropic medication use during
the year after the disaster.
The researchers also found that in the year after September 11, 13 percent
of New York residents surveyed said they received mental health counseling
related to the WTC disaster at least once, and 4.5 percent of those surveyed
took psychotropic medications because of the event.
People who were young, had panic attacks after the WTC disaster, had PTSD
or were depressed tended to make more mental health visits related to the attacks.
People with PTSD, young people, women and those who were personally exposed
to the disaster were among those whose medication use related to attacks.
The study also showed that the greater a person’s exposure
to the WTC event, the more likely he or she was to make WTC disaster-related
mental health
visits.
In general, having health insurance coverage did not predict whether a person
made mental health visits or used psychotropic drugs.
The results also indicate that African Americans were less likely than others
to take more psychotropic medications after the disaster. The researchers suggest
that this result merits more research.
“The finding that African Americans were less likely to take post-disaster
psychotropic medications, despite the availability of services in NYC, requires
further study. Whether this was due to differences in perceptions, actual prescribing
practices, or other factors is unclear,” Boscarino and co-authors write.
The study was partially funded by the National Institute of Mental Health.
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