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Air Today . . . Gone Tomorrow Article Lung Problems Common
Among Police After 9/11: First to arrive at WTC registered highest risk
By DrKoop.com, February 19, 2004
THURSDAY, Feb. 19 (HealthDayNews) -- More
than 75 percent of the police officers who responded to the Sept. 11 terrorist attack in
New York City developed a cough or other respiratory symptoms, says a Beth Israel Medical
Center study in the February issue of the Journal of Occupational and Environmental
Medicine.
The study found that officers who arrived at the World Trade Center before the two towers
collapsed in 2001 were the most likely to have abnormal lung function tests.
After Sept. 11, Beth Israel researchers offered respiratory health assessments to members
of the New York Police Department's special Emergency Services Unit. It was one of the
first units to respond to the World Trade Center attack.
Overall, 77.5 percent of the officers developed respiratory symptoms, most often a cough.
When evaluated again two months later, three-fourths of the affected officers no longer
had respiratory symptoms.
But the symptoms persisted or got worse in the remaining 25 percent of the officers, the
researchers say. None of the officers in the study took medical leave from work because of
their respiratory symptoms.
Only a few of the officers with respiratory symptoms had abnormalities that were detected
during physical examinations, including x-rays, the study says. Almost 30 percent had
abnormal results on a lung function test called spirometry, but most of those
abnormalities were mild.
Police officers with previous respiratory disease or symptoms and those with more intense
exposure to conditions at the World Trade Center site were more likely to have abnormal
spirometry results. The abnormality rate was about 40 percent for officers who arrived at
the World Trade Center before the first tower fell and about 25 percent for officers who
arrived after both towers collapsed.
More information
To learn more about the long-term effects of Sept. 11, go to DisasterRelief.org
(www.disasterrelief.org).
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