Hundreds of U.S. military service members and contractor employees serving in Iraq and Afghanistan claim they have suffered respiratory illnesses or cancer from exposure to open-air burn pits that were used to destroy trash, The New York Times reports.
Nearly 250 service members, civilian workers and their families have joined a lawsuit in Maryland against Pentagon contractor Kellogg Brown & Root, which operated more than two dozen of the pits. Six have died of leukemia, and five are being treated for the disease, while more than a dozen use machines to breathe at night, according to The Washington Post.
During a recent hearing, an attorney for the company urged the judge to dismiss the suit, arguing that Kellogg Brown & Root operated pits at the military’s direction.
The U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs is funding a large-scale study by the Institute of Medicine to determine the possible consequences of burn-pit exposure. In April, the agency determined the pits are an environmental hazard.
The Pentagon is conducting is own review, and Congress is now requiring the military to justify further use of the pits. In May, 42 pits were in use in Iraq while 184 were operating in Afghanistan.
Several medical experts who have conducted their own research believe the military is playing down the issue.
“At this point in time, there is no medical data to indicate any specific illness or illnesses have been caused by exposure to burn-pit smoke,” Dr. Michael E. Kilpatrick, the deputy director of the Pentagon’s Force Health Protection and Readiness Programs, told The Times in a statement.
But Dr. Robert F. Miller, a pulmonary expert at the Vanderbilt University Medical Center who has treated dozens of soldiers from Fort Campbell, Ky., claims he has found a pattern of unusual respiratory and pulmonary disease.
“How big a problem is it?” Dr. Miller asked. “I think it’s pretty big. The soldiers know more about it than the physicians. I get calls from soldiers all over the country.”
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The Va is a oppositional Institute and has always fought against Veterans, why does this country expect loyalty in the service then we are abondanded us once we return from combat?? Fighting the VA for disibility is a emotionally draining thing Veterans should never have to endure.