受9/11纽约世贸中心袭击事件影响的企业员工中的烟草、非法药物使用和药物使用障碍。

IF 1.5 4区 医学 Q3 PSYCHIATRY
Journal of Dual Diagnosis Pub Date : 2023-10-01 Epub Date: 2023-11-01 DOI:10.1080/15504263.2023.2260328
Carol S North, Betty Pfefferbaum
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的:研究2001年9月11日9/11袭击事件后纽约市地区的人口,重点关注烟草和药物使用以及药物使用障碍。大量的研究已经确定了暴露在灾难中产生的重要心理健康后遗症,特别是易患创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)和重度抑郁障碍(MDD)。关于灾难暴露与酒精使用/滥用的关系,也有大量文献,但对烟草和其他药物使用/滥用障碍的研究要少得多。方法:受恐怖主义影响的样本(N = 379)在袭击发生近3年后使用结构化诊断访谈进行了评估,提供了与9/11袭击有关的袭击前和袭击后烟草和药物使用的流行率和发病率、烟草和药物的使用变化以及袭击前和灾难后药物使用障碍的流行率。DSM-IV标准使用结构化的精神障碍诊断访谈进行了全面评估,包括创伤后应激障碍、抑郁症、恐慌症、广泛性焦虑症以及酒精和药物使用障碍。结果:烟草使用量没有显著增加,也没有发现任何亚组(包括灾难创伤暴露)烟草使用量增加的预测因素。毒品使用(主要是大麻)最初有所增加,但在袭击发生后3年有所减少。与其他精神疾病相关的药物使用障碍很罕见,主要发生在9/11之前。结论:灾难发生后,总体上没有发现烟草使用量的增加或使用量增加的预测因素,新药使用障碍的发生率也很低,这表明临床医生对烟草使用量增加和新药使用障碍进行普遍筛查的结果可能非常低。无论如何,灾后环境为关于自我保健的一般性讨论提供了合适的环境,包括对增加烟草使用、避免药物使用的关注,以及对比通过药物更健康的压力管理方法的指导。此外,由于现有的烟草和药物使用在人群中普遍存在,灾后环境可以提醒临床医生对这些问题进行总体评估,并在需要时提供适当的转诊。灾后环境为传播和宣传公共卫生信息以及解决药物使用和滥用问题提供了机会。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Tobacco and Illicit Drug Use and Drug Use Disorders Among Employees of Businesses Affected by the 9/11 Attacks on the World Trade Center in New York City.

Objective: To study the New York City area population after the September 11, 2001, 9/11 attacks, focusing on tobacco and drug use and drug use disorders. An abundance of research has identified the important mental health sequelae stemming from exposure to disasters, especially vulnerability to the development of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and major depressive disorder (MDD). There also is a body of literature on the association of disaster exposure with alcohol use/misuse, but far less research on tobacco and other drug use/disorders.

Methods: A terrorism-affected sample (N = 379) was assessed nearly 3 years after the attacks using structured diagnostic interviews, providing predisaster and postdisaster prevalence and incidence of tobacco and drug use, changes in tobacco and drug use, and predisaster and postdisaster prevalence and incidence of drug use disorders in relation to the 9/11 attacks. DSM-IV criteria were fully assessed using structured diagnostic interviews for psychiatric disorders including PTSD, MDD, panic disorder, generalized anxiety disorder, and alcohol and drug use disorders.

Results: Tobacco use did not increase significantly, and no predictors of increased tobacco use could be found for any subgroups, including disaster trauma exposures. Drug use (largely cannabis) increased initially but decreased by 3 years after the attacks. Drug use disorders, which were associated with other psychiatric disorders, were rare and primarily began prior to 9/11.

Conclusions: The overall lack of increase of tobacco use or predictors of increased use found after the disaster and the low rates of new drug use disorders suggest that universal screening for increased tobacco use and new drug use disorders by clinicians may have very low yield. Regardless, postdisaster settings provide suitable circumstances for general discussions about self-care including concern for increased tobacco use, avoiding drug use, and guidance on healthier means of managing stress than through substances. Additionally, because existing tobacco and drug use are endemic in populations, the postdisaster setting can serve as a reminder for clinicians to assess these problems generally and provide appropriate referrals when needed. Postdisaster circumstances offer opportunities to disseminate and promote public health messages and address issues of substance use and misuse.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.90
自引率
13.60%
发文量
20
期刊介绍: Journal of Dual Diagnosis is a quarterly, international publication that focuses on the full spectrum of complexities regarding dual diagnosis. The co-occurrence of mental health and substance use disorders, or “dual diagnosis,” is one of the quintessential issues in behavioral health. Why do such high rates of co-occurrence exist? What does it tell us about risk profiles? How do these linked disorders affect people, their families, and the communities in which they live? What are the natural paths to recovery? What specific treatments are most helpful and how can new ones be developed? How can we enhance the implementation of evidence-based practices at clinical, administrative, and policy levels? How can we help clients to learn active recovery skills and adopt needed supports, clinicians to master new interventions, programs to implement effective services, and communities to foster healthy adjustment? The Journal addresses each of these perplexing challenges.
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