March Press     ||      Home Page

Date: Tuesday, March 2, 2010, 3:44 AM

Ohio Gulf War Vets,

We at ohiogulfwarveterans.com are still very much interested in hearing about your "quality of care"
at Ohio VA hospitals and clinics.

Please contact us immediately if you should go for treatment at a VA medical center and not
receive treatment and/or exams/medications for your Gulf War Illness conditions.

And / or if any Veteran's Service Organizations do not take your claims seriously
or even files the GWI disability paperwork for you.

I would highly advise meeting with a local Veterans Service Officer
and refile and / or file for your Gulf War Illnessess disabilities.

Hopefully we will be the last generation of warriors to have to be put through this horrendous
and inhumane treatment and "labeling" by those in postitions that are actually employed to take care of us.

Please also see the following... This is just the tip of the iceberg.



VA to Reopen "Gulf War Illness" Cases
Veterans Affairs' Reexamination of Troops' Disabilities 2 Decades after War Could Lead to Compensation

(AP) The Veterans Affairs Department will re-examine the disability claims of what could be thousands of Gulf War veterans suffering from ailments they blame on their war service, the first step toward potentially compensating them nearly two decades after the war ended.

VA Secretary Eric Shinseki said the decision is part of a "fresh, bold look" his department is taking to help veterans who have what's commonly called "Gulf War illness" and have long felt the government did little to help them.
The VA says it also plans to improve training for medical staff who work with Gulf War vets, to make sure they do not simply tell vets that their symptoms are imaginary - as has happened to many over the years.

"I'm hoping they'll be enthused by the fact that this ... challenges all the assumptions that have been there for 20 years," Shinseki told The Associated Press in an exclusive interview.

The changes reflect a significant shift in how the VA may ultimately care for some 700,000 veterans who served
in the Gulf War.
It also could change how the department handles war-related illness suffered by future veterans, as Shinseki said he wants standards put in place that don't leave veterans waiting decades for answers to what ails them.

The decision comes four months after Shinseki opened the door for as many as 200,000 Vietnam veterans to receive service-related compensation for three illnesses stemming from exposure to the Agent Orange herbicide.

About 175,000 to 210,000 Gulf War veterans have come down with a pattern of symptoms that include rashes,
joint and muscle pain, sleep issues and gastrointestinal problems, according to a 2008 congressionally mandated committee that based the estimate on earlier studies.

But what exactly caused the symptoms has long been unanswered.
Independent scientists have pointed to pesticide and pyridostigmine bromide pills, given to protect troops from nerve agents, as probable culprits.
The 2008 report noted that since 1994, $340 million has been spent on government research into the illness,
but little has focused on treatments.

Last week, Shinseki and Sen. Jay Rockefeller, D-W.Va., a member of the Senate Veterans' Affairs committee,
met privately in Charleston, W.Va., with several Gulf War veterans.

In an interview after the meeting, Rockefeller told the AP that Shinseki's background as a former Army chief of staff
made the changes possible.

He said either the military has been reluctant over the years to release paperwork related to the war or
kept poor records about exposures in the war zone, which made it harder for the veterans to prove they needed help.

"The paperwork isn't very accurate, but the pain is very real," Rockefeller said.

Shinseki has publicly wondered why today there are still so many unanswered questions about Gulf War illness, as stricken veterans' conditions have only worsened with age.

Last fall, he appointed a task force led by his chief of staff, John Gingrich, a retired Army colonel who commanded
a field artillery battalion in the 1991 war, to review benefits and care for Gulf War veterans.
The changes stem from the task force's work.

Gingrich said in an interview that he feels a personal stake because some of his own men who were healthy
during the war are dealing with these health problems.

Gingrich said the VA isn't giving a new benefit to Gulf War veterans, just making sure the claims they submitted were done correctly.

"We're talking about a culture change, that we don't have a single clinician or benefits person saying 'you really don't have Gulf War illness, this is only imaginary' or 'you're really not sick,"' Gingrich said.

A law enacted in 1994 allows the VA to pay compensation to Gulf War veterans with certain chronic disabilities
from illnesses the VA could not diagnosis.

More than 3,400 Gulf War have qualified for benefits under this category, according to the VA.

The VA says it plans to review how regulations were written to ensure the veterans received the compensation
they were entitled to under the law.
The VA would then give veterans the opportunity to have a rejected claim reconsidered.

The VA doesn't have an estimate of the number of veterans who may be affected, but it could be in the thousands.

Of those who deployed in the Gulf War, 300,000 submitted claims, according to the VA.
About 14 percent were rejected, while the rest received compensation for at least one condition.

(What the VA report does not tell in the article is the low ratings giving to the claims granted for
Gulf War Releated Illness, nor the few thousand (only) claims granted for "undiagnosed illnesses")

Do your homework veterans.

Thousands of GW Vets fully disabled, but not be compensated as such.