"TEST VETS' AND KIN ENTITLED TO BENEFITS -- MORE
GREAT
INFORMATION FROM SERVICE OFFICER MIKE SCHUSTER

Story here...
http://www.nctimes.com/articles/2006/03/11/news/community/18_44_033_10_06.txt
Story below:
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'Test vets' and kin entitled to benefits
By: MIKE SCHUSTER - For the North County Times
I wish to thank Mike Bailey ( testvets.blogsource.com ) for his e-mail about
Edgewood Arsenal chemical and biological testing.
There is an old idiom when you join the military: "don't volunteer" for
anything.
But, young recruits are often impressed by words such as "National
Security," "God and Country," and "your fellow soldier," and often do the
unthinkable and volunteer for some secret military test program as a human
guinea pig and sign an oath that they'll never reveal what they did.
Such programs have been implemented since WWI and most likely still go on
today. Some of the volunteer programs that we know about today are:
World War II mustard gas test ---- with 60,000 soldier volunteers;
Edgewood Arsenal, chemical and biological testing from 1955 to 1975;
SHAD chemical and biological testing from 1963 into the 70's;
Operation Whitecoat, 1954-1973.
And the list goes on and on, as years ago the military was a cheap source of
human test subjects.
These soldier volunteers have become known as "test vets" who now may suffer
disabilities many years later because of their exposure to such things as
syphilis, anthrax, pulmonary disease, keratitis, cancers, mood disorders and
heart disease, as part of a service test program.
The V.A. in October, 2003 published a study titled "Health Effects from
Chemical, Biological, and Radiological Weapons" ---- both our's and their's).
The 84-page study on the Internet is required reading and scary stuff.
So if you're a "Test Vet" with a disability you will need to do your
research prior to filing your claim. These claims can be laborious and time
consuming for the veteran and his family; this is because not all diseases
are presumptive, personnel records become lost or misplaced, and sometimes
the government is in denial.
First: Get a firm medical diagnoses of the disease that the veteran suffers
and a doctor's opinion that "it is likely as not related to the veterans
exposure to _________ while in the military."
Second: In all claims, the veteran needs to send for his service medical
records and personnel records that should show duty stations, assignments,
time periods of service.
Third: find a dedicated veterans advocate, have them file the claim, be
patient, expect delays. The military is not always quick on these types of
requests from the V.A. for information. So, get health care from your VA
health care provider and then live long enough to see your claim granted.
Also, being a "soldier volunteer" wasn't the only way to be exposed to
conditions in war zones that generated potential health concerns, such as:
the occupation of Hiroshima and Nagasaki after WW II; Agent Orange exposure
in Vietnam and Korean DMZ '69; Gulf War sarin gas exposure in Kamisayah,
Iraq, in March 1991 and the Iraq War, DU (depleted uranium).
If you're one of those "soldier volunteers" or a widow of one, I urge you to
talk to your veteran's advocate.
San Diego Veterans Representative Mike Schuster can be reached at (760)
643-2049 or email at mgs@cts.com .
---------------
Larry Scott
(go
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