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Disabled Veterans Group Raises Concerns Over Soldiers Exposed To Burn Pits

TRANSFORMING HEALTH — A major veterans advocacy organization says the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs should be doing more to help vets who were exposed to toxic chemicals in combat zones, particularly pollution from burn pits.

During the U.S. wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, military contractors routinely burned garbage that included heavy metals, chemicals, human waste and plastic. As early as 2008, soldiers reported illnesses they said was due to being exposed to fumes from the burn pits.

DAV Executive Director Randy Reese pointed to a Vanderbilt Medical Center study of 101st Airborne Soldiers who became ill after a deployment.

“And they did some biopsies on their lungs, and what they found out was, the issues have to do with toxins in their lungs from those burn pits while they were deployed,” he said.

Reese says the DAV supports federal legislation to have a condition called obliterative bronchitis classified as a service related disability.

The Veterans Affairs administration has said there’s no evidence burn pits pose long-term health problems, though the agency says it continues to study the health of veterans who were exposed.

The DAV also wants to help family members who take care of an aging or ill veteran.  For every seriously disabled veteran, there may be a family member who quit working to take care of that veteran full time, Reese said.

Caregivers for veterans injured in conflicts after the September 11, 2001, terror attacks get benefits such as training, health insurance and a small stipend. But caregivers for veterans injured prior to 9/11 don’t get the same benefits.

“And we know that staying home taking care of veterans they have better health outcomes, and it saves taxpayers $50 billion a year, and yet we cannot get these people taken care of,” Reese said.

Veterans’ groups want to change that. He noted that 30 percent of Pennsylvania’s 800,000 veterans have a disability, including tens of thousands of Vietnam-era veterans.

The Department of Veterans Affairs has said it wants to expand its caregiver program for veterans injured prior to 9/11. However, in October, blaming technology infrastructure, the VA announced further delays to that update.