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Washington — “The memories and impact of 9/11 have not faded with time,” NIOSH says in a video launched on the 2023 National Day of Service and Remembrance. 

In an accompanying assertion, NIOSH Director John Howard remembers these “who lost their lives, those who survived, and all who responded with courage and selflessness at the World Trade Center; the Pentagon; and in Shanksville, PA. To this day, we know that many still deal with health impacts, whether from injuries or illness.”

Howard can also be the administrator of the World Trade Center Health Program, which offers no-cost medical monitoring and therapy for 9/11 emergency responders, restoration and cleanup employees, and volunteers. It additionally gives preliminary screenings and therapy to individuals who have been current on the day of the assaults or who labored, lived or went to highschool within the New York City catastrophe space on or within the months after 9/11.

In 2022, NIOSH introduced Health Effects of 9/11, an internet exhibition that spotlights the continuing well being issues of employees who responded throughout and after the assaults. The exhibition, during which employees share their tales, will be visited in individual on the CDC Roybal Campus in Atlanta.

“With more than 400,000 people estimated to have been exposed to toxins or suffer from physical or mental health conditions as result of 9/11, our work and commitment to provide compassionate WTC-related care continues,” Howard mentioned.

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