Panel Refutes 'Gulf War Syndrome'
Panel Refutes 'Gulf War Syndrome'
Report by Institute of Medicine Is a Blow to Veterans Seeking Compensation
Sept. 12, 2006 -- A government advisory panel on Tuesday said it could find no evidence of a 'Gulf War syndrome' afflicting U.S. soldiers who served in Iraq and Kuwait in the early 1990s, though it did affirm that combat veterans do suffer increased rates of many individual ailments.
The conclusion was a blow to veterans who maintain that exposures to pesticides, weapons residues, or other chemicals caused a set of symptoms unique to their service in Operation Desert Storm. The symptoms included fatiguefatigue, memory loss, severe headaches, and respiratory and skin ailments, which interfered with normal daily activities.
Those symptoms and others have penetrated the American lexicon as 'Gulf War syndrome.' But experts convened by the Institute of Medicine (IOM) said that their review of 850 studies shows it doesn't exist.
While studies show that Gulf War veterans are at higher risk than nondeployed soldiers for a variety of illnesses, "the results of that research indicate that ... there is not a unique symptom complex (or syndrome) in deployed Gulf War veterans," the report stated.
Congress and the Veterans Administration rely in part on IOM to determine compensation levels for various illnesses. The VA has resisted calls to classify Gulf War symptoms as a service-connected syndrome. Tuesday's conclusions appear to make it less likely that soldiers will be able to prove to the government's satisfaction that their symptoms are a result of service in Iraq and therefore deserving of full compensation.
"It makes it much harder to make that case," Shannon Middleton, assistant director of health policy at the American Legion, tells WebMD.
The Pentagon began ordering soldiers to undergo health evaluations before deployment in the 1990s after complaints about a Gulf War syndrome first surfaced. But earlier studies usually lacked control groups or measures of soldiers' health before the war -- factors researchers consider vital to understanding the cause of disease.
Thirty percent of Gulf War veterans complain of some form of "multisymptom" illness, often including fatigue, depression, anxiety, pain, or gastrointestinal problems. About half as many nondeployed veterans complain of those symptoms, according to the report.
Panel Refutes 'Gulf War Syndrome'
Report by Institute of Medicine Is a Blow to Veterans Seeking Compensation
Sept. 12, 2006 -- A government advisory panel on Tuesday said it could find no evidence of a 'Gulf War syndrome' afflicting U.S. soldiers who served in Iraq and Kuwait in the early 1990s, though it did affirm that combat veterans do suffer increased rates of many individual ailments.
The conclusion was a blow to veterans who maintain that exposures to pesticides, weapons residues, or other chemicals caused a set of symptoms unique to their service in Operation Desert Storm. The symptoms included fatiguefatigue, memory loss, severe headaches, and respiratory and skin ailments, which interfered with normal daily activities.
Those symptoms and others have penetrated the American lexicon as 'Gulf War syndrome.' But experts convened by the Institute of Medicine (IOM) said that their review of 850 studies shows it doesn't exist.
While studies show that Gulf War veterans are at higher risk than nondeployed soldiers for a variety of illnesses, "the results of that research indicate that ... there is not a unique symptom complex (or syndrome) in deployed Gulf War veterans," the report stated.
Seeking Compensation
Congress and the Veterans Administration rely in part on IOM to determine compensation levels for various illnesses. The VA has resisted calls to classify Gulf War symptoms as a service-connected syndrome. Tuesday's conclusions appear to make it less likely that soldiers will be able to prove to the government's satisfaction that their symptoms are a result of service in Iraq and therefore deserving of full compensation.
"It makes it much harder to make that case," Shannon Middleton, assistant director of health policy at the American Legion, tells WebMD.
The Pentagon began ordering soldiers to undergo health evaluations before deployment in the 1990s after complaints about a Gulf War syndrome first surfaced. But earlier studies usually lacked control groups or measures of soldiers' health before the war -- factors researchers consider vital to understanding the cause of disease.
High Rate of Complaints
Thirty percent of Gulf War veterans complain of some form of "multisymptom" illness, often including fatigue, depression, anxiety, pain, or gastrointestinal problems. About half as many nondeployed veterans complain of those symptoms, according to the report.
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