First-Ever Study of NYC Primary Care Doctors' Response to 2001 Anthrax Attacks Shows Prudent Care, NewYork-Presbyterian/Weill Cornell Researchers Report
Little Evidence of Widespread Panic; Study Highlights
Central Role of Primary Care Physicians in Fighting Future Bioterror Events
New York, NY (October 12, 2004) — Primary
care physicians — working only blocks away from the New York City anthrax
attacks of October 2001 — acted responsibly and rationally in the midst
of the crisis, according to NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Weill Cornell Medical
Center researchers.
"This is the first study to document patterns of primary-care visits and
prescribing during the only lethal bioterror attack in the country's history," said
lead researcher Dr. Nathaniel Hupert, assistant professor of public health and
medicine at Weill Medical College of Cornell University, and assistant attending
physician at NewYork-Presbyterian/Weill Cornell in New York City.
The study, published in the October 11
Archives of Internal
Medicine, found that doctors acted prudently in a challenging situation "where
they had little good guidance, and where the story was changing day by day," Dr.
Hupert said.
On October 12, 2001, the first confirmed case of cutaneous (skin contact) anthrax
in New York City was identified in an NBC producer exposed when she opened
an anonymous letter containing anthrax spores. On October 26, NYC health authorities
identified a case of more dangerous inhalational anthrax, with the victim,
a 61-year-old woman, dying three days later.
In their retrospective study, the NewYork-Presbyterian/Weill Cornell team examined
electronic medical records from September 11, 2001 to December 31, 2001 on
all outpatient telephone and clinic visits to a large outpatient clinic on
New York's Upper East Side — a clinic that typically handles 56,000 patients
per year.
The researchers found, despite media reports of public panic, that "doctors
weren't inundated" by large numbers of frightened patients, Dr. Hupert
said. In fact, patient-doctor contacts involving anthrax concerns totaled just
244 over the 3.5-month study period — amounting to less than two percent
of all contacts.
Furthermore, when patients did request antibiotics like ciprofloxin or doxycycline
to protect against anthrax infection, primary care physicians "responded
very cautiously and selectively," Dr. Hupert noted. "There wasn't
blanket treatment." Overall, just 52 patients visiting this busy Manhattan
clinic received antibiotics for anthrax from their primary care physician during
the fall of 2001.
The study found that patients were more likely to be prescribed antibiotics
if they specifically requested the drugs. "However, many patients who
requested Cipro did so at the behest of their employers — these patients
often worked at what may have been considered high-risk facilities such as
the U.S. Postal Service," Dr. Hupert explained.
Other factors that made it more likely to receive a prescription included reporting
exposure to a suspicious powder or having some kind of abnormal finding on
a physical exam.
"But there was one surprising finding — people who reported illness
symptoms were actually less likely to get antibiotics than those who did not," Dr.
Hupert said. "In those cases, a clinical examination may have uncovered
alternate explanations, such as cold or flu, or bacterial sinusitis," he
explained.
The bottom line, he said, is that doctors acted with restraint and professionalism "in
the unprecedented setting of a slowly unfolding bioterrorism attack."
Besides giving us a view into a pivotal moment in America's first-ever response
to bioterrorism, the study offers policymakers valuable lessons for future
responses to such events.
"The primary care physician is crucial to that response — these were
the people patients were coming to with questions," Dr. Hupert pointed out.
Three years after the events of October 2001, the importance of practicing physicians
has still not been fully recognized, nor has their role in an effective public
health response been defined, he said.
"Community-based health-care providers are one of the most critical elements
in responding to any public health crisis, especially bioterrorism," he
said.
Dr. Hupert and others at NewYork-Presbyterian/Weill Cornell are continuing
their research into public health responses to bioterrorism, including two
studies in collaboration with Dr. Neal E. Flomenbaum, Chief of Emergency Medicine,
on emergency services use at hospitals in the NewYork-Presbyterian Healthcare
System during the anthrax attacks.
Dr. Hupert's research is funded by the U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ).
Co-researchers include Dr. Wairimu Chege, formerly of NewYork-Presbyterian/Weill
Cornell, now at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta; Dr.
Gonzalo M.L. Bearman, of Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, Va.; and
Dr. Fred Pelzman, also of NewYork-Presbyterian/Weill Cornell.
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