Contributors
Description
Military
operations produce a great deal of trash in an environment where
standard waste management practices may be subordinated to more pressing
concerns. As a result, ground forces have long relied on incineration
in open-air pits as a means of getting rid of refuse. Concerns over
possible adverse effects of exposure to smoke from trash burning in the
theater were first expressed in the wake of the 1990–1991 Gulf War and
stimulated a series of studies that indicated that exposures to smoke
from oil-well fires and from other combustion sources, including waste
burning, were stressors for troops. In January 2013, Congress directed
the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) to establish and maintain a
registry for service members who may have been exposed to toxic airborne
chemicals and fumes generated by open burn pits.
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