http://news.bbc.co.uk/low/english/health/newsid_1576000/1576776.stm
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Wednesday,
3 October, 2001, 09:32 GMT 10:32 UK

The Gulf
War took place between 1990 and 1991
The
children of Gulf War veterans are almost twice as likely to be born with birth
defects than those of other soldiers, research has found.
US researchers, sponsored by the
Environmental Epidemiology Service and the Department of Veterans Affairs,
surveyed 30,000 parents in the US Armed Forces.
Half had fought in the 1990 - 1991 Gulf War.
The researchers found children born to Gulf
War veterans were more likely to have psychological and physical disabilities.
[This] seems to
confirm what the Gulf veterans have always said and now it seems that their
children are suffering in the same way
Professor Malcolm Hooper, chief medical adviser to the Gulf veterans
Female soldiers who had
served in the conflict were almost three times more likely to have a child with
a birth defect, compared to women who had not served in the Gulf.
Men who had served in the conflict were
almost twice as likely to have a child with a defect.
Around 697,000 US servicemen and women
travelled to the Gulf, compared to 53,000 personnel from the UK.
'Pattern'
Gulf War veterans from the UK said there
were many similar cases of children being born with deformations such as Down's
Syndrome and other chromosome related disorders in this country.
Marie Rusling, of the National Gulf Veterans
and Families Association told BBC News Online: " We've thought there was a
pattern for a long time.
"The illnesses and the disabilities are
out there in the general population, but its a higher percentage in the Gulf
community."
She added that the US research supported the
veterans' argument that the drugs soldiers were given to counteract the threat
of biological warfare have led to long-term illnesses and death.
UK research is currently underway to examine
the health of children born to Gulf War veterans.
Professor Malcolm Hooper, chief medical
adviser to the Gulf veterans said there were some significant deformations in
British children born to Gulf veterans.
'Malformations'
He added: "Some of the most severe
involve the shortening of limbs and malformations to the ears and parts of the
face.
"It seems to confirm what the Gulf
veterans have always said and now it seems that their children are suffering in
the same way.
"I know there are people here that have
children who are hurting and damaged."
Professor Hooper, who also lectures in
medicinal chemistry at Sunderland University, said proving a link in British
veterans would be more difficult as fewer servicemen and women went, compared
to the US.
He added that previous studies carried out
in America which found there was no increased chance of deformation were unreliable.
But a spokeswoman for the Ministry of
Defence told BBC News Online this latest survey was of defects reported by the
families themselves, rather than an actual clinical study.
She added: "We are aware of the report
and are currently studying it.
"Previous reports from the US have
indicated that there was no increase in deformations in children born to Gulf
veterans."
Related to this story:
Gulf
War Syndrome fear persists (31 Aug 01 | Health) Gulf
War vaccine row (30 Jul 01 | Health) Gulf
veterans 'suffer worse health' (12 Apr 01 | Health) Gulf
War illness 'rank related' (18 Oct 00 | Health) Gulf
War Syndrome study draws blank (08 Sep 00 | Health)
Internet links: Gulf
War Veterans' illnesses | Ministry of Defence |
UK Gulf
Veterans Associations | US Department of
Veterans Affairs |
The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites
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