| Titre : | Exposure to the world trade center attack and the use of cigarettes and alcohol among New York city public high-school students. (2006) |
| Auteurs : | . PING WU ; . BIN FAN ; Patricia COHEN ; COHEN (Michael) : USA. The Michael Cohen Group. Llc. New York. ; Cristiane-S DUARTE ; Cordelia-J FULLER ; Christina-W HOVEN ; Donald-J MANDELL ; George MUSA ; XINHUA LIU (.) : USA. Department of Biostatistics. Mailman School of Public Health. Columbia University. New York. ; Columbia University. College of Physicians and Surgeons. Department of Psychiatry. New York. USA |
| Type de document : | Article |
| Dans : | American journal of public health (vol. 96, n° 5, 2006) |
| Pagination : | 804-807 |
| Langues: | Anglais |
| Mots-clés : | Alcoolisme ; Exposition ; Terrorisme ; Tabagisme ; Consommation tabac ; Consommation ; Boisson alcoolisée ; Cigarette ; Tabac ; Etats Unis ; Amérique ; Adolescent ; Homme ; Tendance séculaire ; Enseignement secondaire ; Trouble anxieux ; Stress ; Amérique du Nord |
| Résumé : | [BDSP. Notice produite par INIST-CNRS R0xxyZPS. Diffusion soumise à autorisation]. We examined exposure to the World Trade Center attack and changes in cigarette smoking and drinking among 2731 New York City public high-school students evaluated 6 months after the attack. Increased drinking was associated with direct exposure to the World Trade Center attack (P<. 05). Increased smoking was not directly associated with exposure to the World Trade Center attack but was marginally significantly associated with posttraumatic stress disorder (P=06). Our findings suggest that targeted substance-use interventions for youths may be warranted after large-scale disasters. |

