http://www.nandotimes.com/healthscience/story/191296p-1854659c.html
Health & Science:
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© 2001 AP Online |
The Veterans
Administration said it would immediately offer disability and survivor benefits
to veterans who served in the Persian Gulf during the conflict a decade ago.
"The hazards of the
modern day battlefield are more than bullet wounds and saber cuts," said
Anthony Principi, secretary of Veterans Affairs.
The results released
Monday have not yet been reviewed by other scientists or published in an
academic journal, but officials said they were releasing them now to prevent
further delay in compensating victims of the progressive, fatal disease.
"They need help now
and we will offer them that help," Principi said.
The study compared nearly
700,000 military personnel who served in the Gulf War between August 1990 and
July 1991 with another 1.8 million personnel who were not deployed to the
region. It found that those who were deployed were nearly twice as likely to
develop amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, a fatal neurological disorder often called
Lou Gehrig's disease.
Among Gulf War veterans,
the rate of disease was 6.7 people per million. Among other military personnel,
it was 3.5 per million.
The rate was not uniform
among all personnel. Those who served in the Air Force were 2.7 times as likely
to contract the disease, and those in the Army were twice as likely. Disease
rates among Marine and Navy veterans were not statistically different from
personnel not in the Gulf.
Researchers do not know
why Gulf War veterans were more likely to contract the disease, the cause of
which is unknown.
Principi said the VA
would continue research on the connection between other illnesses and the Gulf
War and increase research into ALS to try and find a cause, treatment and cure.
Advocates for veterans have
long maintained that Gulf veterans were more likely to develop ALS but earlier,
smaller studies failed to prove a connection.
The same will be proven
true for other illnesses, predicted Steve Robinson, executive director of the
National Gulf War Resource Center.
"We've been proven
right, and we're going to be proven right on a lot of other things as
well," he said. "This whole issue is about to blow wide open."
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