Department of Medicine, Westchester Medical Center and New York Medical College, Valhalla, New York, USA.
Department of Medicine, Division of Infectious Disease, Westchester Medical Center and New York Medical College, Valhalla, New York, USA.
Teach Learn Med. 2021 Apr-May;33(2):129-138. doi: 10.1080/10401334.2020.1818566. Epub 2020 Oct 19.
Little is known about how participation in disaster relief impacts medical students. During the terror attacks of September 11, 2001, New York Medical College School of Medicine students witnessed the attacks and then became members of emergency treatment teams at St. Vincent's Hospital, the trauma center nearest to the World Trade Center. To date, only two reports describe how 9/11 influenced the lives of medical students. This study was designed to characterize the short- and long-term effects on NYMC students and to compare those effects between students assigned to St Vincent's Hospital and classmates assigned to rotations at facilities more remote from the attack site. We hypothesized that participation in direct relief efforts by students assigned to the St. Vincent's site might have long-lasting effects on their lives and these effects might vary when compared to classmates assigned elsewhere. : This was a retrospective, survey-based, unmatched cohort study. Participants included all school of medicine graduates who were St. Vincent's rotators on 9/11 ( = 22) and classmates ( = 24) assigned to other sites who could be contacted and agreed to participate. Our primary measure was whether the 9/11 experience affected the participant's life, defined as an affirmative response to the item which asked whether the 9/11 experience affected the participant's "life thereafter, career choice, attitudes toward life or attitudes toward practice." Secondary measures included self-reported effects on career, life, attitudes, health, resilience, personal growth, personality features, and the temporal relationship between the attack and stress symptoms. : Completed surveys were received from 16/22 (73%) St. Vincent's and 18/24 (75%) non-Saint Vincent's participants: 62% male, 82% had children, 74% identified as Caucasian/white and 76% employed full-time. Overall, slightly more than half (58%) of respondents reported an effect of 9/11 on their life, with a greater but non-significant proportion of St. Vincent's rotators reporting life impact (67% versus 50% for St. Vincent's versus other locations, respectively). High post-9/11 stress levels, current marriage, and ability to make and keep family and social relationships were associated with an effect on life which approached statistical significance. Participants reported positive or no post 9/11 effects on empathy and altruism (50%), resilience (47%), attitudes toward medical practice and career (32%), and charitable giving (24%), while positive, negative, or no effects were reported for attitude toward life, family and social relations, physical health, and conscientiousness. Mental health was the only domain in which all participants reported unchanged or negative effects. Two St. Vincent's rotators but no students assigned elsewhere believed they experienced 9/11-related post-traumatic stress disorder. Just over half of New York Medical College School of Medicine students rotating at St. Vincent's Hospital on 9/11 or elsewhere reported significant life-effects as a result of direct/indirect experiences related to the attack. Perceived stress may have been a more important driver of this life-change than other factors such as geographic proximity to the disaster site and/or direct participation in relief efforts. Further study of medical school interventions focused on stress reduction among students who participate in disaster relief is warranted.
关于参与救灾对医学生的影响知之甚少。在 2001 年 9 月 11 日的恐怖袭击中,纽约医学院的医学生目睹了袭击事件,随后成为圣文森特医院的紧急治疗小组的成员,该医院是离世界贸易中心最近的创伤中心。迄今为止,只有两份报告描述了 9/11 如何影响医学生的生活。本研究旨在描述对 NYMC 学生的短期和长期影响,并比较在圣文森特医院工作的学生与被分配到离袭击地点更远的设施轮转的同学之间的影响。我们假设,被分配到圣文森特医院的学生参与直接救援工作可能会对他们的生活产生持久的影响,与被分配到其他地方的同学相比,这种影响可能会有所不同。
这是一项回顾性、基于调查的、未匹配的队列研究。参与者包括所有在 9/11 日被分配到圣文森特医院轮转的医学院毕业生( = 22)和可以联系并同意参与的其他地点的同学( = 24)。我们的主要衡量标准是 9/11 经历是否影响了参与者的生活,这一定义为参与者对“9/11 经历是否影响了参与者此后的生活、职业选择、对生活的态度或对实践的态度”这一问题的肯定回答。次要衡量标准包括自我报告的对职业、生活、态度、健康、适应力、个人成长、人格特征的影响,以及攻击和压力症状之间的时间关系。
收到了 22 名圣文森特医院轮转学生中的 16 名(73%)和 24 名非圣文森特医院轮转学生中的 18 名(75%)的完整调查回复:62%为男性,82%有孩子,74%自认为是白种人/白人,76%全职工作。总体而言,略超过一半(58%)的受访者报告 9/11 对他们的生活产生了影响,圣文森特医院的轮转学生报告生活受到影响的比例更高,但没有统计学意义(分别为 67%和 50%)。高灾后应激水平、目前的婚姻状况以及建立和维持家庭和社会关系的能力与生活受到影响有关,这一结果接近统计学意义。参与者报告了 9/11 后对同理心和利他主义(50%)、适应力(47%)、对医疗实践和职业的态度(32%)以及慈善捐赠(24%)产生了积极或没有影响,而对生活、家庭和社会关系、身体健康和责任心则产生了积极、消极或没有影响。心理健康是唯一一个所有参与者都报告没有变化或消极影响的领域。两名在圣文森特医院轮转的学生,但没有在其他地方的学生认为他们经历了与 9/11 相关的创伤后应激障碍。纽约医学院的医学生中,只有略多于一半的人在 9/11 日或其他时间在圣文森特医院轮转的学生报告说,由于与袭击直接或间接相关的直接/间接经历,他们的生活发生了重大变化。与灾难现场的地理接近程度和/或直接参与救援工作等其他因素相比,感知到的压力可能是这种生活变化的更重要驱动因素。有必要进一步研究医学院的干预措施,重点是减轻参与救灾的学生的压力。