Late Breaking News
Follow Us
2012 Compendium
Inconclusive Report Does Little to Cool Down Burn-Pit Controversy Cont.
- Categorized in: December 2011, Department of Defense (DoD), Department of Veterans Affairs (VA), News
Members of Congress also are having their say on the burn-pit issue. The same week the IoM released its report, Rep. Todd Akin (R-MO) and Sen. Tom Udall (D-NM) introduced bills that would require the VA to create a burn-pit registry modeled after the Agent Orange Registry and the Gulf War Syndrome Registry.
“I have worked with a number of my constituents who were exposed to burn-pits while serving in the military and have been suffering from very severe health problems since,” Akin said in a statement. “Unfortunately, the VA has struggled to help these veterans. Creating a burn-pit registry is an important step to help these veterans get the care and support they need and that our nation has promised them.”
If the legislation is passed, the registry would be required to include any information that the VA secretary determines is necessary “to ascertain and monitor the health effects of the exposure of members of the Armed Forces to toxic chemicals and fumes caused by open burn-pits.”
In addition, the legislation would require the VA secretary to develop a public-information campaign to inform eligible individuals about the open-burn-pit registry, including how to register and the benefits of registering.
The VA also would have to periodically notify eligible individuals of significant developments in the study and treatment of conditions associated with exposure to toxic chemicals and fumes caused by open burn-pits.
The legislation would also require VA to enter into an agreement with an independent scientific organization to develop a report that will be submitted to Congress.
In June, Matthew King, MD, a pulmonologist who has been examining respiratory issues among troops and veterans, spoke on behalf of the American Thoracic Society at a congressional hearing. He said pulmonologists are “deeply concerned” about the respiratory issues that some military personnel are suffering, such as constrictive bronchiolitis (CB). He also cited the burn-pits, noting that troops in Iraq and Afghanistan are faced with a barrage of respiratory insults, “ranging from dust storms to inhaled smoke from burn-pits to aerosolized metal and chemicals from exploding IEDs, blast overpressure or shock waves to the lung, outdoor aeroallergens such as date pollen and indoor aeroallergens such as mold aspergillus.”
DoD, however, has maintained that its studies have not found that the burn-pits pose a health risk to troops. DoD officials told U.S. Medicine in a written statement that the IoM's findings “reflect similar findings of the DoD in the continued attempts to find an association between burn-pit emissions and health consequences.”
Moving forward, the military will “closely review and evaluate the IoM’s findings and recommendations” for ways it can work with the VA “to better answer the questions regarding health risks associated with burn-pit emissions or with the high levels of airborne particulate matter,” DoD officials wrote.
Paul Ciminera, MD, codirector, of VA’s Environmental Health Program, said in response to the report that the VA will form a workgroup to provide recommendations. “Among those recommendations will be the overall structure of the research approach,” he told U.S. Medicine. “We will be working closely with DoD to make sure we understand the IoM recommendations and come up with an approach in the most efficient and effective means possible.”
Terry Walters, MD, deputy chief consultant for VA’s Post-Deployment Health, said she felt that an important part of the IoM report is that it “may not be burn-pits,” but the increased particulate matter or pollution in the air in both Afghanistan and Iraq that may be of interest.
“Burn-pits get all the press because you can see it, you can smell it, there is obvious smoke coming from a point source. But, one of the major important things about this study was that it’s probably pollution — think Pittsburgh in 1950 — rather than just burn-pits,” she told U.S. Medicine.
IoM Findings
For the IoM study, the committee analyzed data on air-monitoring at Joint Base Balad (JBB); health-effects information on chemicals detected in more than 5% of the air-monitoring samples at JBB; and health-effects information on populations considered to be surrogates of military personnel exposed to combustion products from burn-pits.
The committee analysis of the raw data from DoD’s air-monitoring efforts at JBB concluded that levels of most pollutants of concern were not higher than levels at other polluted sites worldwide. The air-monitoring data suggest that the pollutants of greatest concern at JBB include a “mixture of chemicals from regional background and local sources — other than the burn pit — that contribute to high PM,” according to the report.
The committee concluded that research on other populations exposed to complex mixtures of pollutants, “has not indicated increased risk for long-term health consequences such as cancer, heart disease and most respiratory illnesses among these groups.”
However, the committee also cited shortcomings in the data it analyzed. For example, there was a lack of specific information on the wastes burned and on other sources of background pollution.
It also was hard for the committee to determine whether the experience of surrogate populations they studied could apply to troops stationed at JBB. The IoM team also indicated that the monitoring data provided by DoD was lacking and that its measurements did not include ozone, carbon monoxide, nitrogen dioxide or sulfur dioxide.
Pointing to the gaps in the data and the IoM’s conclusion, Robert Miller, MD, a pulmonologist at Vanderbilt-Ingram Cancer Center, Nashville, TN, said he was not “reassured that the burn-pits are safe.”
Miller and King authored an article published in July’s New England Journal of Medicine that showed soldiers returning from the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan are suffering from severe respiratory issues. That study found that, of a cohort of 80 troops, 38 were found to have CB. In this group of soldiers, 28 had served in northern Iraq in 2003 and reported having been exposed to smoke from a sulfur-mine fire near Mosul, and many had reported exposure to dust storms and open burn-pits.
One of Miller’s concerns is that returning troops from Afghanistan and Iraq are experiencing serious respiratory issues that may not be caught if physicians rely on X-rays and pulmonary-function testing alone.
“We know that there are at least 10% to 15% of soldiers who complain of respiratory issues,” he told U.S. Medicine. “We think there are a number of guys like ours [at Vanderbilt] that might be dismissed as normal because their conventional workups are normal. In our case, it took a lung biopsy to prove these guys were affected,” he said.
Miller said he also would like to see soldiers undergo a baseline pulmonary-function testing before they deploy.
“We would like their physical testing to be a part of their medical record, so we could know exactly what they could do and when they could do it,” he said. “We want to know a little more about the exercise capacity and the pulmonary function capacity of the population being deployed.”
Vanderbilt study links military service in Middle East with serious lung disorder
Related Pulmonary Diseases Articles
- Male Veterans with COPD At High Risk of Bone Disease
- New Research Suggests Dust Could Be Critical Factor in Respiratory Disease Among Deployed Troops
- Interventional Pulmonology Seeks Better Outcomes for Lung Patients
- VA Patients More Likely to Suffer Sleep Apnea, Have More Treatment Options
- Harsh Environment in Southwest Asia - Not Just Burn Pits - Cause Health Problems in Troops
- Inconclusive Report Does Little to Cool Down Burn Pit Controversy
- 1918 Flu Virus Circulated Silently Before Becoming Killer
- Congressional Testimony Fuels Debate on Deployment-Related Respiratory Disease



Then they make a news release which is supposed to be authoritative while refusing to include the necessary data on the effects of burning the type of materials actually burnt... because it's too complicated.
Good job DOD, you are repeating the Agent Orange process again.