Study finds lasting impact of PTSD on World Trade Center responders


Michele J. Barrett Executive Communications Officer | Stony Brook University

A study involving nearly 13,000 World Trade Center (WTC) responders has examined post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptoms over a 20-year period from July 2002 to December 2022. The research shows that while PTSD symptoms can change, they persist for many responders and increase in a smaller portion of them. These changes help predict physical impairment and mental health outcomes years after the trauma.

Conducted by researchers at Stony Brook Medicine in affiliation with the World Trade Center Health and Wellness Program at Stony Brook University, the findings have been published online in Nature Mental Health.

The study is based on more than 81,000 clinical observations from 12,822 responders. It found that symptoms were stable in the short term but changed significantly over two decades, peaking over a decade after exposure and declining modestly thereafter. For confirmed PTSD cases, symptoms improved within eight to ten years on average. However, about 10 percent of participants reported elevated symptoms two decades post-trauma. Changes in symptoms also predicted higher functional impairments and increased mental health care utilization.

“Our findings highlight the enduring and long-term impact of PTSD among WTC responders, even with the substantial individual variability in PTSD symptom trajectories within the large sample,” said Frank Mann, lead author and senior research scientist in the Program in Public Health and Department of Medicine at the Renaissance School of Medicine (RSOM).

All participants are part of the Long Island WTC Health and Wellness Program funded by the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH). This program provides annual monitoring visits for WTC-related disorders including PTSD.

“We believe that these findings...are an important roadmap to the ongoing nature of PTSD in our WTC responders,” said co-author Benjamin Luft, MD, director of the Stony Brook WTC Health and Wellness Program.

Luft noted an additional finding: Non-professional responders like construction workers were at greater risk for chronic PTSD compared to professional first responders. This highlights significant financial consequences associated with chronic PTSD development.

Mann, Luft, and their colleagues emphasize several takeaways: Consider long-term effects as symptom changes occur slowly; continual patient monitoring is essential as single-time screenings may miss late-emerging or relapsing cases; ongoing care is necessary due to high rates of accompanying physical and mental impairment among severe cases.

Organizations Included in this History


Daily Feed

Local

The King is Back in the South Shore Press

The legendary Long Island journalist Karl Grossman’s latest column.


Sports

Don't Expect Bregman to Pay Off

This week, one of the bigger names in the free agency cycle signed with the Chicago Cubs, and fantasy managers everywhere sighed. Usually, anyone heading to Wrigley Field is viewed as a positive, but for Alex Bregman, more information has emerged suggesting this move could spell trouble for his fantasy outlook. Bregman is a right-handed pull hitter who previously played in two of the more favorable home parks for that profile in Houston and Boston. Both parks feature short left-field dimensions that reward pulled fly balls and help inflate power numbers.


Sports

Futures Bettors Will Be Smiling

The College Football Championship is set, and it pits two of the more unlikely teams against each other. Indiana may have the largest living alumni base in the country, with more than 800,000 graduates, but few expected the Hoosiers to reach this stage. They feature zero five-star recruits and have instead relied on depth, discipline, and consistency while dominating all season long.