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REPUBLICAN
PRESS RELEASE
September 25, 2007
BURR CALLS FOR MORE TREATMENT OF THOSE WITH
GULF WAR ILLNESS
Media contact: Jeff Schrade (202)224-9093
(Washington, DC) U.S. Senator Richard Burr (R-North Carolina), the top
Republican on the Senate Committee on Veterans' Affairs, today said he
will continue his efforts to ensure that veterans with illnesses
associated with service in the Gulf War receive the best medical care
available.
"Nearly 16 years after the end of hostilities in the first Gulf War,
questions about the health status of those who served in that conflict
remain," Burr said. "Evidence shows that many of them suffer from
fatigue, memory loss, joint pain, and skin rashes at higher rates than
their fellow soldiers who were not deployed to the Gulf War. We still
don't know why these people who shared a common experience of service in
the Gulf War are suffering from these medical problems. Over the past
fifteen years, the U.S. has spent well over $300 million on research and
yet we still don't have the answers," Burr stated.
"While we may not know the cause of these diseases, we do know the
symptoms our veterans face are real. Our research efforts should
continue to focus on treatment for our Gulf War veterans. Our veterans
deserve to know the cause of these illnesses and they deserve the best
care available to manage symptoms," Burr added.
Dr. Meryl Nass, an internal medicine physician from Maine, testified
that at the time of the 1991 war, American combat servicemembers could
have been exposed to depleted uranium, pesticides, smoke from oil well
fires, as well as nerve agents from the destruction of Iraqi weapons.
The National Institute of Medicine reviewed 850 studies and found that
there was no consistent pattern of symptoms among veterans of the first
Gulf War.
Lea Steele, an associate professor at Kansas State University who
studies veterans with medical complications from the Gulf War, told the
committee that some of the symptoms can be debilitating. "Veterans with
Gulf War Illness typically experience some combination of severe
headaches, memory and concentration problems, persistent pain throughout
the body, and profound fatigue," Steele said.
Active duty military personnel who have questions or concerns about
their health or service in the Persian Gulf region are advised to
contact their commanding officer or call the Department of Defense Gulf
War Veterans Hotline (1-800-497-6261).
Veterans seeking disability compensation for illnesses incurred in or
aggravated by military service should contact a Veterans Benefits
Counselor at the nearest VA regional office or health care facility or
call the VA Gulf War Information Helpline at 1-800-PGW-VETS
(1-800-749-8387).
Links:
* Department of Defense - Office of the Special Assistant for Gulf War
Illness -
http://www.gulflink.osd.mil/vet_help/help.jsp
* National Institute of Medicine - Gulf War and Health:
http://www.iom.edu/CMS/3793/24597/36955.aspx
* Veterans Benefits Administration:
http://www.vba.va.gov/ro/west/phenx/gulf.htm
* VA Federally Sponsored Research on Gulf War Veterans' Illnesses - 2006
Annual Report to Congress
http://www.research.va.gov/resources/pubs/GulfWarRpt06.cfm
-------------------------
Larry Scott --
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