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Journal Article

Citation

Crane MA, Levy-Carrick NC, Crowley L, Barnhart S, Dudas M, Onuoha U, Globina Y, Haile W, Shukla G, Ozbay F. Ann. Glob. Health 2014; 80(4): 320-331.

Affiliation

Mount Sinai School of Medicine, World Trade Center Health Program, New York, NY.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2014, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.aogh.2014.08.215

PMID

25459334

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The response to 9/11 continues into its 14th year. The World Trade Center Health Program (WTCHP), a long-term monitoring and treatment program now funded by the Zadroga Act of 2010, includes >60,000 World Trade Center (WTC) disaster responders and community members ("survivors"). The aim of this review is to identify several elements that have had a critical impact on the evolution of the WTC response and, directly or indirectly, the health of the WTC-exposed population. It further explores post-disaster monitoring efforts, recent scientific findings from the WTCHP, and some implications of this experience for ongoing and future environmental disaster response.

FINDINGS: Transparency and responsiveness, site safety and worker training, assessment of acute and chronic exposure, and development of clinical expertise are interconnected elements determining efficacy of disaster response.

CONCLUSION: Even in a relatively well-resourced environment, challenges regarding allocation of appropriate attention to vulnerable populations and integration of treatment response to significant medical and mental health comorbidities remain areas of ongoing programmatic development.


Language: en

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