Agent Orange still haunts Iowa Vietnam vets
Veterans waiting longer for aid as health problems persist
IOWA CITY — Unlike warmly welcomed
veterans of earlier and later wars, Vietnam vets got the parting gift
that keeps on giving: Agent Orange — a plant defoliant that mistakenly
included the carcinogen dioxin.
Nearly 40 years after the war’s
end, disability claims for often-deadly ailments caused by the
ubiquitous toxic spray continue to mount, as do wait times for
disposition of disability claims.
Though it would be difficult to
confirm with government statistics, the number of veterans suffering
Agent-Orange-related afflictions almost certainly exceeds the more than
358,000 U.S. military personnel killed or wounded in combat with the
enemy during the Vietnam War.
“We track things by the condition
itself, not by the cause of the condition,” said Randal Nollen, a
spokesman for the Department of Veterans Affairs in Washington, D.C.
“The
number one population that we handle for disability claims is Vietnam
veterans with Agent Orange-related ailments,” ahead of veterans of the
wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, said Don Tyne, director of the Linn County
Veterans Affairs Office.
During the past eight months, Tyne said his office has helped more than 1,000 Vietnam veterans apply for disability benefits.
Tyne
said the Iowa Department of Veterans Affairs has 7,000 pending
disability claims, with an average wait for disposition of 18 months.
“This is the longest wait period since I’ve been here. Ten years ago it was 90 days,” Tyne said.
READ MORE: http://thegazette.com/2013/03/27/agent-orange-still-haunts-iowa-vietnam-vets/
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