Wednesday, September 5, 2007

Australian Vets Win $13.5 Million Study of Child Defects

The Australian Federal Government has announced a decision to commission a $13.5 million, eight-year study into the health of children of Vietnam veterans. The first results of this study will be out in 2009.
The Minister for Veterans' Affairs, Bruce Billson, announced the study this week, to be done by a research institute yet to be chosen.
Vietnam veterans' children have long been thought to be vulnerable to the effects of the defoliant Agent Orange and other health problems. Agent Orange, which includes the deadly compound dioxin, has been suspected of having an effect on human stem cells and thereby on future generations. More see:
Veterans win $13.5m child study.

1 comments:

Cynthia said...

The VA has added some diseases to its list of diseases presumed to be caused by Agent Orange exposure: Parkinson's disease, B cell leukemias, iischemic heart disease. If a Vietnam Vet applied for benefits based on the claim that Agent Orange caused him/her to suffer one of these diseases and was denied, there is a really good chance the claim would be approved now if they reapply. We can help: http://veterans-benefits-denial.com/.