Abstract: Background
The terrorist attacks in the USA on 11 September 2001 affected suicide
rates in two European countries, whereas overall US rates remained stable. The
effect on attack site rates, however, has not been studied.
Aims
To examine post-attack suicide rates in areas surrounding the three airline
crash sites.
Method
Daily mortality rates were modelled using time series techniques. Where
rate change was significant, both duration and geographic scope were
analysed.
Results
Around the World Trade Center, post-attack 180-day rates dropped
significantly (t = 2.4, P = 0.0046), whereas comparison
condition rates remained stable. No change was observed for Pentagon or Flight
93 crash sites.
Conclusions
The differential effect by site suggests that proximity may be less
important that other event characteristics. Both temporal and geographic
aspects of rate fluctuation after sentinel events appear measurable and
further analyses may contribute valuable knowledge about how sociological
forces affect these rates.