| HEXAVALENT CHROMIUM
EXPOSURE TAKES TOLL ON VET
"Everyone is supposed to be happy now
because the spouse is home and everyone is together, putting the
pieces back together again. But the pieces no longer fit."
NOTE from
Larry Scott, VA Watchdog dot Org
... Visit our Iraq War Toxins page for more about hexavalent
chromium, and the burn pits ... here ...
http://www.vawatchdog.org/iraqwartoxins.htm
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6 years after Iraq, hexavalent
chromium exposure weighs on veteran
By Julie Sullivan, The Oregonian
http://www.oregonlive.com/health/index.ssf/2009
/12/6_years_after_iraq_hexavalent.html
ROCKAWAY -- The Naylor living
room is all playroom, cleared to toddle, cuddle and roll. But when
Dad's home, the children often head to the back bedroom to play
quietly with Mom.
Six years after Guy Naylor returned from Iraq, he can't stand the
clamor of his own family. The soft-spoken dialysis technician
shouted at other drivers so often, his family moved to Rockaway to
escape Portland traffic. The medic who ran every day has gained 80
pounds. Joint pain wakes him. He coughs so much, his patients
constantly ask if he has a cold. He swallows nine different
medications a day. Up from none.
"He doesn't seem like a 40-year-old man," says his wife, Toniann.
"He seems 60."
Naylor is being treated for post-traumatic stress and exposure to
hexavalent chromium, an industrial chemical and well-known
carcinogen that soldiers unwittingly faced while guarding war
contractors. He's one of 278 Oregon Army National Guard soldiers
who were notified of possible
exposure
while serving at or near the Qarmat Ali water-treatment plant in
2003. Fleeing Iraqi troops loyal to Saddam Hussein had dumped the
orange industrial chemical across the property.
Since the Oregon Guard's notified Naylor "out of the blue" last
February of his exposure, he has taken all the recommended steps.
He's been examined by the Portland Veterans Affairs environmental
physician. He's enrolled in the Gulf War Registry. The list
includes the 112,515 veterans whose confounding symptoms are
linked to tours in the Gulf in 1990-91 and in Iraq since 2003.
Naylor's symptoms are a chief reason why the VA wants to track all
Qarmat Ali veterans separately, flagging their records and
studying them over time.
But naming Naylor's issues doesn't make living with them any
easier. The weight of Naylor's war, like many combat veterans, is
being shouldered almost entirely by his family.
"Everyone is supposed to be happy now because the spouse is home
and everyone is together, putting the pieces back together again,"
says his wife, Toniann Naylor, 31.
"But the pieces no longer fit."
When Guy Naylor's Forest Grove
unit was called up seven years ago, Capt. Jon Van Horn chose
Naylor for a senior medic position. Naylor was a Portland native
who had served in the Oregon Guard since 1987, combating fires and
floods. He'd been an active duty soldier, in Korea and for two
years at Walter Reed Medical Center. He worked as a kidney
dialysis technician at Providence St. Vincent Medical Center. He
was a married father of four. He was, Van Horn says, experienced,
dependable, motivated and upbeat.
Their unit was among the first Oregon troops into Iraq, and they
paid for the honor. Hygiene and air quality was so bad at their
first Kuwaiti camp, soldiers suffered bloody diarrhea and could
not safely exercise for all the burning industrial pollutants.
Naylor, who'd also been trained as a machine gunner, was among the
small number of Oregon soldiers sent to guard Kellogg Brown & Root
employees working on Operation Restore Iraqi Oil. Small teams
traveled to the Iraqi border, jumping into KBR vehicles headed to
the oil fields.
One stop was the Qarmat Ali water-treatment plant, where the
soldiers stayed outside while KBR contractors worked indoors.
Months later, the Indiana Guard replacing Oregon troops learned
the orange dust coating their clothing and boots at the plant was
a corrosion fighter that contained the carcinogen, hexavalent
chromium.
Last year, KBR employees and Indiana soldiers accused managers at
the Halliburton subsidiary of deliberately withholding that
information in order to restore the oil flow and earn millions in
completion bonuses.
At the plant, Naylor both suffered and treated fellow soldiers for
the coughs, sinus problems and headaches that he blamed on sand
and dehydration.
After Naylor's unit left Qarmat Ali in June 2003, their problems
persisted at a base outside Baghdad where they confronted other
problems. "We saw terrible things. None of us were prepared for
the local stuff," says Van Horn, a physician assistant at Legacy
Emanuel Medical Center who specializes in trauma.
The medics would treat Iraqi families who came to the gate for
care, sometimes with children who'd been dipped into boiling water
for punishment. The scald victims were usually girls as young as 9
months. The child abuse haunted the soldiers, especially Naylor
and other fathers, says Van Horn. "We were treating the kids at
the gate for burns that would have landed them in a burn center
here."
Naylor was also miserable in the 150-degree heat with stinging
rashes on his back and chest. The first time he jumped from a
troop truck, the weight of his body armor drove him to his knees.
But he was also a superb medic, according to his supervisor, Staff
Sgt. Rob Stevens, who said Naylor saved a soldier who'd been hurt
in a Humvee rollover.
But Naylor never got comfortable in combat. "I was afraid all the
time," he admits, and he worried constantly about his family back
in Oregon.
He had met his wife at work at Providence St. Vincent Medical
Center, where Toniann, a single mom, was attracted by his calm and
steady devotion. But at his homecoming in 2004, Naylor snapped at
their kids.
"It was an instant change," she says. "I kept waiting for him to
come back to his old normal self. It me took three years to
realize that wasn't going to happen."
Sixteen soldiers from Naylor's unit have sued KBR for knowingly
exposing them to hexavalent chromium. They join Guard soldiers
from Indiana, West Virginia and South Carolina who say they suffer
breathing and stomach problems, and are at a higher risk of
cancer. At least three soldiers who served at Quarmat Ali have
died of cancer, including Nicholas Thomas of Happy Valley. KBR has
denied harming troops. KBR argues that no injury is linked to
chemical exposure at the water treatment plant.
Complaints from KBR employees and Indiana Guard arose during
Senate hearings on Iraq contract abuses in 2008. That led to the
Oregon connection, virtually unknown until it was reported in The
Oregonian last January. Shortly after, the Oregon Guard sent
letters to soldiers who served at or near Quarmat Ali.
At least five others Oregon soldiers are expected to join the suit
this week, bringing the total to 21, says Portland attorney David
Sugerman. Attorneys are wrangling over whether KBR is subject to
the jurisdiction of Oregon courts.
Meanwhile, Naylor has not had the time or the energy to join the
suit, much less learn much about it. He puts 500 miles a week on
his pickup commuting to St. Vincent's for his $35,000-a-year job.
He works three 12-hour days, sleeping at his parents' home in
Forest Grove, then returns home for long weekends. Older children
Brett, 18, and Sierra, 15, live mostly with Naylor's first wife.
Toniann stays home with Amyann, 13; Kayla, 7; Dominic, 5; and
Joey, 14 months.
The family has felt the brunt of the war. When Naylor first came
back from Iraq, he drank. He erupted in explosive rage. He was
exhausted. As his mood steadily darkened, he threatened to drive
off a cliff. He tried sawing through his arm with a knife and was
hospitalized in the VA's psych unit, diagnosed with bipolar
disorder that doctors told him emerged after his traumatic
experiences in Iraq.
He's being treated by a VA psychologist and therapist, has stopped
binge drinking, and medication has stabilized his mood. But like
all rural veterans, access to PTSD experts with combat experience
is limited.
Physically, his symptoms seem to mirror problems associated with
hexavalent chromium: He takes medicine for high blood pressure and
a racing heart and severe acid reflux. He still has short-term
memory problems and severe sleep apnea.
And Dominic, now 5, conceived within a week of his homecoming has
been diagnosed with autism. Naylor fears a connection to his Iraq
service.
"I have a lot of guilt," Naylor says, "thinking maybe I brought
something home."
Toniann refuses to blame her husband. She concentrates on
surviving. The couple drained a pension fund and sold his CPR
training equipment on eBay to help Santa Claus. They marvel they
are still together and agree it's for the kids. They even
supported his oldest son, Brett, whose dream has been to join
Naylor's former Oregon Guard unit.
Van Horn, Naylor's medical commander in Iraq, says he was shocked
when he first saw Naylor back at headquarters in Forest Grove
after their return.
"Something got sucked out of him," Van Horn says. Naylor retired
from the Guard in March, after 22 years.
Van Horn says for all the talk of the Greatest Generation,
Naylor's generation faces the same issues as soldiers in World War
II, Korea and Vietnam did. War is hell. And then you take it home.
"But I'm proud of Guy. Whatever his issues are, he's remained
functional. He's returned to society, he's gone on with his life.
He's carrying his load. And he has not quit.
"He has not quit."
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