More than four decades after the end of the Vietnam War, research is
still showing the effects of the herbicide Agent Orange. The latest
findings: An association between exposure and high blood pressure
A new study has found a close relationship between Agent Orange
exposure during the Vietnam War and high blood pressure, a conclusion
that could lead the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs to dramatically
expand the number of veterans eligible for compensation.
The study,
published last week by VA researchers in the Journal of Occupational
and Environmental Medicine, found a higher rate of hypertension among
members of the Army Chemical Corps who handled Agent Orange during the
war compared to those who didn’t. Corps members who served in Vietnam
but did not spray the chemicals also had a higher rate of hypertension
than their peers who served outside Vietnam.
Both results were statistically significant and add to a body of evidence linking Agent Orange exposure and hypertension.
The findings come 41 years after the close of the Vietnam War and
decades since the last supplies of Agent Orange were incinerated. Since
then, veterans have become increasingly distrustful of the VA. They
maintain that their exposure to Agent Orange, which contained the toxic
chemical dioxin, has harmed their own health and has been passed on to
their children.
A VA working group has been studying the latest scientific literature
since March to determine if any illnesses should be added to the agency’s list of diseases
for which vets are automatically entitled to compensation if they
served in Vietnam. Specifically, the group has been looking at new evidence linking bladder cancer, under-active thyroid, Parkinson’s-like symptoms and hypertension to Agent Orange exposure.
The VA had been expected to announce its decision this year, but
officials now say that will be left to the administration of
President-elect Donald Trump.
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