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American Legion Applauds Report on Gulf War Illness
(Syndromes)
WASHINGTON,
Nov. 28 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- The American Legion is
expressing strong support for a report by the Department of Veterans Affairs
(VA) that promises better care for veterans diagnosed with Gulf War illness.
The report, entitled Gulf War Illness and the Health of Gulf War
Veterans: Scientific Findings and Recommendations, was released today by
the VA's Research Advisory Committee on Gulf War Veterans' Illnesses (RAC).
In it, the committee identified many scientific issues for which additional
research is needed. Highest priority was given to research focused on
identifying effective treatments for Gulf War illness. High priority was
also given to research directed at identifying objective biological markers
associated with Gulf War illness, especially those that advance efforts to
improve diagnostic testing. The report also recommends annual allocations of
not less than
$60 million for Gulf War research in the federal budget.
"The American Legion is very pleased that research aimed at identifying
effective treatment for the various maladies plaguing our Gulf War veterans
is at the top of the VA committee's list of priorities," said National
Commander
David Rehbein. "After all, it has been more than 17 years
since the end of the 1991 Gulf War and it is about time that these warriors'
war-related health problems be addressed aggressively," he continued. "This
is a solid report and The American Legion urges the Secretary [of VA] to act
quickly on the committee's recommendations," added Rehbein.
According to the RAC, about 25 to 32 percent of Gulf War veterans are
affected by a complex of symptoms, commonly referred to as Gulf War illness,
over and above rates in contemporary military personnel who did not deploy
to the 1990-91 Gulf War. This equates to between 175,000 and 210,000
veterans out of the nearly 700,000 troops deployed during the war. The
symptoms of Gulf War illness typically include some combination of chronic
headaches, cognitive difficulties, widespread pain, unexplained fatigue,
chronic diarrhea, skin rashes, respiratory problems and other abnormalities.
Even more alarming, according to the report, "[t]he federal Gulf War
research effort has yet to provide tangible results in achieving its
ultimate objective, that is, to improve the health of ill Gulf War
veterans." A small number of treatments have been studied and none have been
shown to provide significant benefit for a substantial number of veterans.
The American Legion is encouraged that the report also addresses the
relationship between research and VA disability benefits. VA's ability to
compensate veterans for disabilities related to their Gulf War service is
directly related to research and other scientific findings. In 1998,
Congress passed legislation that directed VA to contract with the Institute
of Medicine (IOM) of the National Academy of Sciences (NAS) to review
available research and issue reports that are used by the Secretary of the
VA to make decisions regarding Gulf War-related disability compensation.
There have been nine reports released to date but none have resulted in
additional compensation benefits for ill Gulf War veterans. The committee
concluded that the IOM reports have been "skewed and limited by a
restrictive approach to the scientific tasks mandated by Congress, an
approach directed by VA in commissioning the reports." The committee
recommended that VA contract with IOM to redo previously completed Gulf War
and Health reports to adhere to requirements set forth by Congress.
The RAC, established by Public Law 105-368, is a panel of prominent
scientists and distinguished veterans that provides advice and
recommendations to the Secretary of Veterans Affairs on proposed research
plans and strategies related to understanding and treating the health
consequences of military service in the
Southwest Asia theater of operations during the 1990-91
Gulf War. This is the committee's first major report since 2004.
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