-Caveat Lector-

>From spiked online

}}}>Begin
Article23  May 2002
World Trade Centre syndrome
by Simon Wessely


I was at a medical meeting recently, which involved the usual stuff - thousands of
doctors, lectures, symposia, posters, its own TV channel, receptions, and so on. The
meeting was geared towards public health, and the theme was infectious disease.

In a year in which 2million people died of AIDS, 2million died of TB and 2million died
of malaria,

it is right that a major meeting of the world's public health doctors should be geared
towards infectious diseases. But what was the main topic of conversation, and
dominated the sessions?

Anthrax.

In a way, this is not surprising. Anthrax has caused five deaths, which is of course a
tragedy.



And the anthrax episode could hardly have had more effect on American public life
and institutions. The US government was brought to its knees; half of Congress
closed; the postal service effectively shut down. Opening the post apparently
became an act as fraught with danger as entering the Chernobyl reactor - indeed , it
required the wearing of even more protective equipment. I wonder if the person who
did this had any idea of what the response would be - or was it an additional bonus?

The full social and psychological consequences of the anthrax attacks continue to
unfold, but

no one can doubt they are immense, and seemingly out of proportion to the realistic
threat they posed to life and limb.

How have we reached this state of affairs?

Our reactions to the anthrax episode cannot be seen in isolation, or without reference
to our



general views of health, illness and risk. Similarly, the emergence of 'World Trade
Syndrome', a vague collection of symptoms among the residents of Lower
Manhattan, blamed on various 'toxins' released after the collapse of the Twin
Towers, only makes sense in the context of a seemingly endless list of other
mysterious symptoms and syndromes that are blamed on similar toxic disasters.

Our modern cultural views of health and illness, and the seeming mismatch between
the

achievements of medicine and our symptomatic malaise, is sometimes referred to as
the paradox of health: that the healthier our society is, the more ill we seem to feel.

Symptoms are common in all societies, and are rarely associated with clear-cut
medical

conditions such as cancer or heart disease. It is an exceptional person who has not
experienced at least one somatic symptom, such as headache or fatigue, in the past
month. An American study of healthy university students found that no fewer than 81
percent had experienced at least one somatic symptom during the previous three
days. Women in south London are said to experience symptoms on one day out of
three, chiefly headache and fatigue.

That is well known. What is less well known, as historian Edward Shorter has shown,
is that

it is getting worse.

In the 1920s, the average American reported 0.8 episodes of serious acute illness
per year.

By the early 1980s, this had risen to 2.1. Between 1957 and 1976, Americans
experienced more decreased activity days, spent more time in bed, and experienced
more symptoms.

Why?

Few can doubt we are living in a more medical age. Our expectations of medicine
are higher



than ever before, because for the first time in human history doctors are actually able
to treat and cure some diseases, rather than simply look after the patient (or indeed,
actively get in the way of healing).

As the late and much missed Roy Porter told us, the modern medical enterprise is
one of the

greatest success stories of humanity. When women die in childbirth there is always a
confidential and serious inquiry to find out why; the death of children is so rare as 
to
be a national news item whenever it happens; and for the first time, most people
have probably never encountered a dead body in the course of their normal lives.

So we expect more from doctors, and we get more - but not as much as we want.

The paradox of health means that although we are healthier, expect and get more
from



medicine than ever before, and rarely encounter death, we feel worse. Although all
object indices of health have improved during this century, and indeed during the last
40 years, our own perception of our health has declined.

We now have a more heightened consciousness of health than before, and a greater

likelihood to view somatic distress within medical, rather than social, frameworks.
Indeed, it is precisely because we are healthier, with higher expectations of the
power of medicine, that we have actively encouraged the spread of medicine into
areas where it has not gone before. We medicalise the non-pathological - and this is
instituted not just by the medical professions but by the consumers themselves. So
the normal symptoms and malaise that are part of the human condition, exacerbated
by encounters with adversity such those on and after 11 September, are now more
likely to be medicalised.

Who do I blame for this? In the UK, I blame generations of politicians who have been
in

charge of the health service, and who have found it hard to say 'enough is enough' -
instead writing 'patients' charters', which perpetuate the idea that unrealistic
expectations can be met.

We should also look more critically at the growth and power of the environmental
lobby, since

this too has not been without its own side effects. People look for explanations of
their symptoms. It could be 'one of those things', or 'the flu', or 'stress', or 
'worry'. But
research has shown that one explanation in particular is on the increase, and that
that the 'environment'. Increasingly, it is the environment - mystery bugs, toxins,
chemicals, pollution, and so on, that is blamed for those non-specific symptoms that
have always been with us.

One reason why this has happened is our increasing awareness of risk. Few can
doubt that

we view the world as more hazardous than before, and are aware of more and more
risks and dangers from previously innocent sources.

Nothing in life is safe or familiar any more. Everything we eat, drink, breathe, use at
work, or

make phone calls with, now seems to pose a risk. We now believe we have the right
to live in a risk-free society, which we intellectually acknowledge as an absurd
proposition, yet emotionally we take it on board. We feel we cannot accept any risk.

Of course there are such things as environmental disasters. We think of Bhopal,
Seveso,

Chernobyl.... And we think of the real and unexplained rise in asthma, which is not
always a benign condition. But who, for example, were the main casualties of
Chernobyl? The 23 fireman killed during the clean up, and the thousands and
thousands of foetuses aborted throughout Europe because of an erroneous fear of
reproductive risk.

The problem is that the more we fear our environment, the more our general well
being

suffers, thus providing inadvertent 'proof' of the correctness of our perceptions.
Psychologists have shown that the more we believe in the malevolent influence of
the environment, the more we actually suffer.

The strength of a person's views about the environment correlate with what happens
to

them when they are exposed to hazards - and even when they are not. The
influential medical journal Science once carried an article entitled 'The dump that
wasn't there'. It was a description of a community blighted by the discovery the town
had been built on the site of an old toxic waste-disposal site. As the news spread,
people's health deteriorated. Except it was a mistake: the dump was actually located
many miles away from the community. The malaise which had settled over the
inhabitants came not from the toxins, as they thought, but from the erroneous belief
that there were toxins around. And even when this mistake was pointed out, the
community remained blighted.

Furthermore, our response to what is essentially a social and political problem, rather
than a

scientific or medical one, is now sanctioned in the 'precautionary principle'. But 
where
is the evidence that this policy, of deliberate overreaction, has been effective in
providing reassurance? Indeed, one can argue that far from reducing those
anxieties, it may well have fuelled them (as could have been predicted from basic
psychological principles of the uses and abuses of reassurance). We have
abandoned proportion, or perspective.

Here is Victorian Leeds, as quoted by Theodore Dalyrmple in his polemic Mass
Listeria:

'It was full of refuse from water closets, cesspools, common drains, dung hill
drainings,



infirmary refuse, wastes from slaughter houses, chemical soap, gas, dye-houses,
and manufacturers, coloured by blue and black dye, pig manure, old urine wash;
there were dead animals, vegetable substances and occasionally a decomposed
human body.'

Victorian food was grossly contaminated - by strychnine in rum, copper sulphate in
pickles and

preserves, lead in mustard, ferrous sulphate in tea and beer, lead and mercury in
sugar and chocolate. A cartoon in Punch magazine in 1855 shows a little girl
approaching a grocer and saying, 'if you please, sir, mother would like a pound of tea
to kill the rats with, and an ounce of chocolate to get rid of the beetles'.

And yet it is now, after a century of legislation to ensure clean air, clean water and

unadulterated foods, that 90 percent of American students believe that foods affect
how they feel, and that 20 percent of the population believe they have food allergies -
even though only one percent actually do. It is now that our buildings are declared
sick, that people are allergic to the twentieth century and go and live in oxygen 
tents,
and that Californian department stores declare themselves fragrance-free zones, to
prevent the chemically sensitive from collapsing on their premises. It is now that
wearing perfume has been made an offence in Halifax, Nova Scotia, and that a man
has been charged with attempted murder for exposing his chemically sensitive wife
to perfume.

It is against this background that we can start to understand the size and scale of the

response to the anthrax episode in the USA.

>From a technical perspective, anthrax is a rather poor weapon - like many chemical
and

biological agents it is unpredictable, hard to deliver, as likely to hurt friend as 
hurt a
foe, and of little military use. This is why governments have signed up to a series of
treaties banning it - not solely because of moral outrage, but because they don't think
it is very useful in fighting wars. They don't ban things such as tanks or automatic
rifles, which are useful weapons.

Anthrax is a poor weapon except in one sense - the generation of fear.

Anthrax is exceptionally well-adapted as a weapon of terrorism, in which the aim is
not to kill



large numbers of people, but to create fear, mistrust and suspicion, and to destroy
trust in institutions, especially those designed to protect us.

We only have ourselves to blame for allowing this to happen. Anthraxiety and World
Trade

Centre Syndrome are the latest consequences of an ideology that tells us that our
physical environment is responsible for most of our bodily discomforts and ills. We
have created a climate in which a maverick, disgruntled individual can bring a society
to its knees by adding anthrax to a letter.

Simon Wessely is professor of psychiatry at King's College London, and is speaking
at the

spiked conference After 11 September: Fear and Loathing in the West, on Sunday
26 May at the Bishopsgate Institute in London. See here for full details.





Reprinted from : http://www.spiked-online.com/Articles/00000006D903.htm
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