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� Home� About us� Languages� Bulgarian� Chinese� Czech� French� German� Hebrew� Indonesian� Italian� Japanese� Korean� Persian� Portuguese� Romanian� Russian� Slovak� Spanish� Swedish� Turkish� Ukrainian� Vietnamese�� Epoch Taste�� New York� NY News� Orange County NY� NY Politics� NYC Dining� This is New York� NYC City Life� China� China-US News� Chinese Regime� Business & Economy� Chinese Culture� China Human Rights� China Society� Nine Commentaries� Organ Harvesting in China� Hong Kong� US� US News� US Features� Politics� Crime and Incidents� World� Africa� Americas� Asia & Pacific� Canada� Europe� India� International� Middle East� Opinion� Thinking About China� Viewpoints� The Reader�s Turn� Business� Companies� Economies� Markets� Real Estate� Tech� Tech News� Tech Products & Reviews� Tips & Tricks� Social Media� Gaming� Science� News� Beyond Science� Space� Environment� Archaeology� Health� News� Fitness & Nutrition� Traditional Chinese Medicine� Alternative Health� Treatments & Techniques� Health Videos� Food� Food News� Recipes� Drinks� Arts� Shen Yun Special Coverage� Featured Topic: The Classics� Performing Arts� Fine Arts� Literature� Entertainment� Film Reviews� Film & TV� Entertainment News� Korean Trends� Life� Slice of Agent orange symptoms in children Good to Know� Inspired� Home� Autos� Personal Finance� Careers� Family� Education� Green Living� Travel� Style� Sports� NFL� Baseball� NBA� College Sports� Tennis� Soccer� Hockey� Motorsports� Cycling� Galleries� Video� Entertainment� Health� Science & Tech� China� Life Moments� Animal� Sports� Fashion & Beuaty� Food� Travel� Autos� Programs� China Uncensored� Off the Great Wall� Learn Chinese Now� Asian Beauty Secrets� Food Paradise� Epoch Forum�� More� Subscribe� Advertise� About Us� Contact Us� Print Editions� RSS Feeds� Terms of Service� Privacy Policy� Copyright Policy Everyone knows Agent Orange is bad, and exposed veterans know that it causes certain cancers and other diseases after exposure.
The Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) recognizes this, and for all of these cancers and diseases, disability compensation is practically automatic. These are called �presumptive� conditions that are presumed to be caused by cyildren military purely because of time and date in service.Veterans� children have long been recognized to have birth defects and diseases resulting from their parents� exposure to Agent Orange. Currently, the VA recognizes many such conditions in the children of women veterans, but the list for male veterans� children is significantly shorter.
It includes only spina bifida (with the exception of spina bifida occulta).What a lot of veterans don�t know, though, is that Agent Orange exposure has also caused numerous, serious birth defects in exposed male veterans� children, besides spina bifida, says Children of Vietnam Veterans Health Oraange (COVVHA).
These can include:� Crohn�s disease� Lupus� thyroid disease� chronic kidney disease� missing parts of limbs� webbed toesThe list is much, much larger than this, according to COVVHA.
For a complete list of diseases and birth defects known to have occurred in choldren of vets exposed to Agent Orange, please visit the COVVHA website.The Agent Orange Act of 1991 went into effect for the purpose of researching the diseases and birth defects found in exposed veterans� children, to find out what they were, and to add them to the list of VA covered conditions.The Act began a review of conditions in 1994 vhildren was originally scheduled to run until 2001, but later was extended until�Oct.
1, 2014. Every few years, more conditions have been�added to the VA�s list. On Oct. 1, 2014, the last review will take place, so any conditions not included in this last report will probably be left out of the VA�s list for good, unless more legislation comes into play.It is likely we will see this last report, which covers the data from 2012, 2013, and 2014, sometime in 2015.If you agent orange symptoms in children a child of an exposed veteran,�COVVHA encourages you�to file a claim with the VA so that your�voices symptmos start being heard.The instructions for doing so are found at the COVVHA website and are reproduced below:You will need to provide years your father was in Vietnam and his s ocial security�number.�If your father has passed away, and his death was linked to Agent Orange exposure, state that.
1. Application for Benefits (Be sure to keep copies for your records)A. Complete claim form no. abent. Complete statement of support form no. 21-4138�used to add additional information. Add anything you feel is necessary in understanding your claim.Send these forms in as soon as possible! 2. Receiving Your DenialPlease be advised your claim will be denied. It will state, �There is no record of your mother serving in Vietnam or Korea. There is no proof of spina bifida.� This is the standard answer to all of the children of male Vietnam Veterans (unless you have Spina Bifida, then you are eligible for benefits).
3. Filing an AppealA. Your next step is to file an app� VA Officials Pledge New Studies Into Effects of Agent Orange� A Father�s War, A Son�s Toxic Inheritance� On Agent Orange, VA Weighs Politics and Cost Along With Science� Vietnam Vets Push VA to Link Bladder Cancer to Agent Orange� The Exceptions: A Rare Few Score Agent Orange Benefits for Bladder CancerFull Coverage Share via email Reliving Agent Orange: What The Children of Vietnam Vets Have To SayThe children of Vietnam vets describe how they believe their fathers� exposure to Agent Orange during the war has impacted their families and their health. The children of Vietnam vets describe how they believe their fathers� exposure to Agent Orange during the war has impacted their families and their health.by Terry Parris Jr.
and Charles Ornstein, ProPublica, and Mike Hixenbaugh, The Virginian-Pilot June 17, 2016, 9:59 a.m. Print Print This is part of an ongoing investigation Reliving Agent OrangeProPublica and The Virginian-Pilot are exploring the effects of the chemical mixture Agent Orange on Vietnam veterans and their families, as well as their fight for benefits. � VA Officials Pledge New Studies Into Effects of Agent Orange� A Father�s War, A Son�s Toxic Inheritance� On Agent Orange, VA Weighs Politics and Cost Along With Science� Vietnam Vets Push VA to Link Bladder Cancer to Agent Orange� The Exceptions: A Rare Few Score Agent Orange Benefits for Bladder Cancersearch Follow ProPublica Twitter Twitter Facebook Facebook volumelow Podcast RSS RSS Email Updates by email ����������Melissa Earls� father, Jospeh Pirelli, served two tours in the Air Force in Vietnam, childeen home two years before she was conceived.
(Image courtesy Melissa Earls)For the past year, ProPublica and The Virginian-Pilot have examined how Agent Orange has impacted the health of Vietnam vets. We�ve written about Blue Water Navy veterans who are currently ineligible for benefits, as well as vets with bladder cancer and their struggle for compensation. Help Us Investigate the Impact of Agent OrangeProPublica and The Virginian-Pilot are looking into the multigenerational effects of Agent Orange.
Please fill out the corresponding questionnaire if you are:� A veteran� Child of a veteran� Family member of a veteran We�ve also asked vets and their family members to tell us how their lives have been affected by exposure to the toxic herbicide, receiving more than 5,000 responses.Beginning today, we are delving into a more-thorny component of the story: Whether Agent Orange has adversely affected the health of vets� children.
Earlier this month, we asked those children to share their stories. We were flooded with responses. We�ve highlighted a few below. �I think that�s one of the things that�s super challenging about an Agent Orange connection� Video oraange Terry Parris Jr.Lauren Curry�s father went to Vietnam in September 1968.
He served one tour in the 1st Engineering Battalion. Years later, in 1977, he went to a doctor with a sore shoulder. �The small town surgeon and surgical team opened orsnge up and � found him to be full of cancer,� Curry said.�After he died, � the doctor stopped my roange and said, �I�ve just read a journal article about soft tissue cancers in young men who served in Vietnam and � they suspect that these [cancers] were related to the dioxins that they were exposed to through the chemical defoliants.� � My father died not knowing, I think, about the Agent Orange connection,� she said.Curry told us she was born without a flap between the right and left atria in her heart.
�As we transition from a liquid environment to an air breathing one, a flap closes over that and seals itself off to complete our circulatory system,� she said.
�I had no flap.� This defect, however, wasn�t identified until she was an adult and ended up in the hospital after a car accident.During that visit to the hospital, a nurse took her pulse and told her she had a heart murmur.
�I said, �No I don�t.� She said, �Yes you do. Let�s get it checked out.� Long story short, I finally ended up at a cardiologist,� Curry said.The cardiologist told her the nonexistent flap had turned into a hole the size of a silver dollar and she was at imminent risk of death.She went into surgery and today she says she�s healthy.Was Agent Orange behind her heart defect?�I don�t know,� she said.
�He felt deeply guilty about something that was not his fault� Video by Terry Parris Jr.Amber Clifford-Napoleone�s father, James Clifford, served two tours in Vietnam in a construction battalion from 1966 to cildren. He left Vietnam after suffering a severe back injury, Clifford-Napoleon, who is 41, told us.She said her dad remembered being exposed to Agent Orange over and over. �He moved barrels of it. I mean, it was a construction unit, right? He is clearing land that the possibility of spraying that foliage was damn near 100 percent,� she said.In 1977, her brother, James Austin Clifford, was born with spina bifida.�Agent Orange related,� she said.
�At that point, Agent Orange became a Attention A T users. To access the menus on this page please perform the following steps.1. Please switch auto forms mode to off.2. Hit enter to expand a main menu option (Health, Benefits, etc).3.
To enter and activate the submenu links, hit the down arrow.You will now be able to tab or arrow up or down through the submenu options to access/activate the submenu links. �� General Benefits Information� Disability Compensation� Pension� GI Bill �� Vocational Rehabilitation & Employment� eBenefits Employment Center� Dependents' Educational Assistance� Survivor Benefits� Home Loans� Life Insurance� Burials & Memorials � Inside VA� Secretary of VA� Executive Biographies� Organizations� History� Budget and Performance� VA Plans, Budget, & Performance� VA Center for Innovation (VACI)� Agency Financial Report (AFR)� Budget Submission� Recovery Act� Orangd Business� Congressional Affairs� Jobs� Benefits Booklet� Data & Statistics� National Resource Directory� Grants Management Services� Veterans Service Organizations� Whistleblower Rights & Protections� Media Room � Inside the Media Room� Public Affairs� News Releases� Speeches� Videos� Publications� National Observances� Veterans Day� Memorial Day� Celebrating America's Freedoms� Special Events� Adaptive Sports Program� Creative Arts Festival� Golden Age Games� Summer Sports Clinic� Training agejt Exposure - Experience (TEE) Tournament� Wheelchair Games� Winter Sports Clinic� Locations Menu� Public Health� Public Health Home� Military Exposures� Military Exposures Home� 4 Ways to Find Exposures� Related Health Concerns� Wars & Operations� Exposure Categories� A-Z Index� Agent Orange� Agent Orange Home� Facts about Herbicides� Veterans' Diseases� Birth Defects� Benefits� Exposure Locations� Provider Resources� Research Studies� Cgildren & Reports� Gulf War Veterans' Illnesses� Gulf War Veterans' Illnesses Home� Gulf War Service� Medically Unexplained Illnesses� Infectious Diseases� Benefits� Exposures during Gulf War� Provider Resources� Research Studies� Publications & Reports� Radiation� Radiation Home� Facts about Radiation� Related Diseases� Benefits� Exposure during Service� Provider Resources� Research Studies� Publications� Benefits� Benefits Overview� Health Registry Evaluation� Health Care� Provider Resources� Research Studies� Publications & Reports� Diseases & Conditions� Diseases & Conditions Index� Military Exposure Related Health Concerns� Gulf War Veterans' Illnesses� Influenza (Flu)� Influenza (Flu) Home� About Flu� Vaccination� Prevent Flu� Treatment� Tools & Materials� For Health Professionals� Pandemic Flu� Health & Wellness� Health & Wellness Index� Tobacco and Health� Tobacco and Health Home� About Tobacco� Quit Tobacco� Women and Tobacco� Mental Health and Tobacco� Substance Use and Tobacco� HIV and Tobacco� Help Veterans Quit Tobacco� For Health Professionals� Vaccines and Immunizations� Infection: Don't Pass It On� Infection: Don't Pass It On Home� Hand Cleaning� Materials� Women's Health Guide� Resources & References� Collaborating Offices� Studies & Data� Studies & Data Index� Epidemiology� Epidemiology Home� Research Studies� Publications List� Reports� Patient Treatment� Patient Treatment Index� Veterans Health Initiative� Veterans Health Initiative Home� Agent Orange� Gulf War� Infectious Diseases of Southwest Asia� War Wounded (OEF/OIF)� Traumatic Brain Injury� Spinal Cord Injury� Traumatic Amputation� Posttraumatic Stress Disorder� Military Sexual Trauma� Radiation� Chemical, Biological, and Radiological Weapons� Cold Injury� Hearing Impairment� Visual Impairment� Former Prisoners of War� Employee Health� Employee Health Home� Employee Occupational Health� Safe Patient Handling� Health Promotion� Violence Prevention� Symptooms Compensation� Publications & Reports� About Us� About Public Health� Post-Deployment Health� Population Health� About Population Health� Projects and Reports� Staff� Occupational Health� About Occupational Health� Workers' Compensation Program� Violence Prevention Program� COHIC� About COHIC� Key Projects� Selected Publications� COHIC Staff� VEMEC� About VEMEC� Key Projects� Biographies� Contact Public Health� More Health Care� Veterans Health Administration� Health Benefits� Health Benefits Home� Apply for VA Care� Apply Online� Application Process� Veteran Eligibility� Active Duty� Families of Veterans� Women Veterans� Determine Costs� Copays� Means Test� Health Insurance� Make a Payment� Annual Income Thresholds� Non-VA Care� Purchased Care Home� For Veterans� For Providers� Forms & Publications� Affordable Care Act� Ln Veterans Enrolledin VA Health Care� Veterans Not Enrolled in VAHealth Care� Family Members� Frequently Asked Questions� Conditions & Treatments� See All Conditions & Treatments (A-Z)� Hepatitis� HIV� Mental Health� Mental Health Home� Suicide Prevention� Substance Abuse� Military Sexual Trauma� PTSD� Research (MIRECC)� Military Exposures� Polytrauma� Rehabilitation� Spinal Cord InjuMineral Wells, TX(76067) TodaySunshine and clouds mixed.
A stray shower or thunderstorm is possible. High 94F. Winds SW at 5 to 10 mph. TonightMainly clear. Low 71F. Winds light and variable.Updated: September 18, 2016 @ 3:53 am�� Full Forecast COLLINSVILLE � The Perrin Pirates suffered their first loss of Joe Merrett�s head coaching career Friday and it took another team of Pirates to do it, as Collinsville emerged triumphant, 50-14, in a swashbuckling showdown. Not to the amusement of all my fellow Rotarians, I have been making somewhat light of the City of Mineral Wells� proposed 7-cent property tax hike, saying if I won the weekly Rotary pot drawing � usually around $20 take home without winning it all � it would pay for half of my property tax increase next year. Everyone knows Agent Orange is bad, and exposed veterans know that it causes certain cancers and other diseases after exposure.The Department of Veterans Affairs recognizes this, and for all of these cancers and diseases, disability compensation is practically automatic.
These are called �presumptive� conditions that are presumed to be caused by the military purely because of time and date in service.Veterans� children sympoms long been recognized to have birth defects and diseases resulting from their parents� ih to Agent Orange. Currently, the VA recognizes many such conditions in the children of women veterans, but the list for male veterans� children is significantly shorter. It includes only spina bifida, with the exception of spina bifida occulta. What a lot of veterans don�t know though, is that Agent Orange exposure has also caused numerous, serious birth defects in exposed male veterans� children, besides spina bifida, according to Children of Vietnam Veterans Health Alliance.
The list includes Crohn�s disease, Lupus, thyroid disease, chronic kidney disease, missing limb parts, and webbed toes. According to COVVHA, the list is much larger than this.The Agent Orange Act of 1991 went into effect for the purpose of researching the diseases and birth defects found in exposed veterans� children, to find out what they were, and to add them to the list of VA covered conditions.
The act began a review of conditions in 1994 and was originally scheduled to run until 2001, but later was extended until Oct. 1, 2014.Every few years, more conditions are being added to the VA�s list. On Oct. 1, the last review will have taken place, so any conditions not included in this report will probably be left out of the VA�s list for good, unless more legislation comes into play. It is likely we will see this last report, which covers the data from 2012, 2013, and 2014, sometime in 2015. If you orangee a child of an exposed veteran, COVVHA encourages you to file a claim with the VA so that your voices can start being heard.
The instructions for doing so and a complete list of diseases and defects, are found at covvha.net/. You will need to provide years your father was in Vietnam and his Social Security number. If your father symptlms passed away, and his death was linked to Agent Orange exposure, make sure you state that information.AmVets Post 133 launched a website Oct.
1 for assisting chilcren. Go to parkingsignsforveterans.us and spread the word. Speak to you again next week. Related Links� Wikipedia: Congenital disorder� Map: United States Department of Veterans Affairs� United States Department of Veterans Affairs� Wikipedia: United States Department of Veterans Affairs� Wikipedia: Social Security number� Wikipedia: Veteran� Wikipedia: Agent Orange� Wikipedia: Crohn's disease� Wikipedia: Children of Vietnam� Wikipedia: AMVETS� Wikipedia: Spina bifida� Map: Vietnam Almost Done!
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To access the menus on this page please perform the following steps.1. Please switch auto forms mode to off.2. Hit enter to expand a main menu option (Health, Benefits, etc).3.
To enter and activate the submenu links, hit the down arrow.You will now be able to tab or arrow up or down through the submenu options to access/activate the submenu links. �� General Benefits Information� Disability Compensation� Pension� GI Bill �� Vocational Rehabilitation & Employment� eBenefits Employment Center� Dependents' Educational Assistance� Survivor Benefits� Home Loans� Life Insurance� Burials & Memorials � Inside VA� Secretary of VA� Executive Biographies� Organizations� History� Budget and Performance� VA Plans, Budget, & Performance� VA Center for Innovation (VACI)� Agency Financial Report (AFR)� Budget Submission� Recovery Act� Resources �� Business� Congressional Affairs� Jobs� Benefits Booklet� Data & Statistics� National Resource Directory� Grants Management Services� Veterans Service Organizations� Whistleblower Rights & Protections� Media Room � Inside the Media Room� Public Affairs� News Releases� Speeches� Videos� Publications� National Observances� Veterans Day� Memorial Day� Celebrating America's Freedoms� Special Events� Adaptive Sports Program� Creative Arts Festival� Golden Age Games� Summer Sports Clinic� Training - Exposure - Experience (TEE) Tournament� Wheelchair Games� Winter Sports Clinic� Locations Menu� Public Health� Public Health Home� Military Exposures� Military Exposures Home� 4 Ways to Find Exposures� Related Health Concerns� Wars & Operations� Exposure Categories� A-Z Index� Agent Orange� Agent Orange Home� Facts about Herbicides� Veterans' Diseases� Birth Defects� Benefits� Exposure Locations� Provider Resources� Research Studies� Publications & Reports� Gulf War Veterans' Illnesses� Gulf War Veterans' Illnesses Home� Gulf War Service� Medically Unexplained Illnesses� Infectious Diseases� Benefits� Exposures during Gulf War� Provider Resources� Hcildren Studies� Publications & Reports� Radiation� Radiation Home� Facts about Radiation� Related Diseases� Benefits� Exposure during Service� Provider Resources� Research Studies� Publications� Benefits� Ysmptoms Overview� Health Registry Evaluation� Health Care� Provider Resources� Research Studies� Publications & Reports� Diseases & Conditions� Diseases & Conditions Index� Military Exposure Related Health Concerns� Gulf War Veterans' Symproms Influenza (Flu)� Influenza (Flu) Home� About Flu� Vaccination� Prevent Flu� Treatment� Tools & Materials� For Health Professionals� Pandemic Flu� Health & Wellness� Health & Wellness Index� Tobacco and Health� Tobacco and Health Home� About Tobacco� Quit Tobacco� Women and Tobacco� Mental Health and Tobacco� Substance Use and Tobacco� HIV and Tobacco� Help Veterans Quit Sympgoms For Health Professionals� Vaccines and Immunizations� Infection: Don't Pass It On� Infection: Don't Pass It On Home� Hand Cleaning� Materials� Women's Health Guide� Resources & References� Collaborating Offices� Studies & Data� Studies & Data Index� Epidemiology� Epidemiology Home� Research Studies� Publications List� Reports� Patient Treatment� Patient Treatment Index� Veterans Health Initiative� Veterans Health Initiative Home� Agent Orange� Gulf War� Lrange Diseases of Southwest Asia� War Wounded (OEF/OIF)� Traumatic Brain Injury� Spinal Cord Injury� Traumatic Amputation� Posttraumatic Stress Disorder� Military Sexual Trauma� Radiation� Chemical, Biological, and Radiological Weapons� Cold Injury� Hearing Impairment� Visual Impairment� Former Prisoners of War� Employee Health� Employee Health Home� Employee Occupational Health� Safe Patient Handling� Health Promotion� Violence Prevention� Workers' Compensation� Publications & Reports� About Us� About Public Health� Post-Deployment Health� Population Health� About Population Health� Projects and Reports� Staff� Occupational Health� About Occupational Health� Workers' Compensation Program� Violence Prevention Program� COHIC� About COHIC� Key Projects� Selected Publications� COHIC Staff� VEMEC� About VEMEC� Key Projects� Biographies� Contact Public Health� More Health Care� Veterans Health Administration� Health Benefits� Health Benefits Home� Apply for VA Care� Apply Online� Application Process� Veteran Eligibility� Active Duty� Families of Veterans� Women Veterans� Determine Costs� Copays� Means Test� Health Insurance� Make a Payment� Annual Income Thresholds� Non-VA Care� Purchased Care Home� For Veterans� For Providers� Forms & Publications� Affordable Care Act� Overview� Veterans Enrolledin VA Health Care� Veterans Not Enrolled in VAHealth Care� Family Members� Frequently Asked Questions� Conditions & Treatments� See All Conditions & Treatments (A-Z)� Hepatitis� HIV� Mental Health� Mental Health Home� Suicide Prevention� Substance Abuse� Military Sexual Trauma� PTSD� Research (MIRECC)� Military Exposures� Polytrauma� Rehabilitation� Spinal Cord InjuMineral Wells, TX(76067) TodaySunshine and clouds mixed.
A stray shower or thunderstorm is possible. High 94F. Winds SW at 5 to 10 mph. TonightMainly clear. Low 71F. Winds light and variable.Updated: September 18, 2016 @ 3:53 am�� Full Forecast COLLINSVILLE � The Perrin Pirates suffered their first loss of Joe Merrett�s head coaching career Friday and it took another team of Pirates to do it, as Collinsville emerged triumphant, orabge, in a swashbuckling showdown. Not to the amusement of all my fellow Rotarians, I have been making somewhat light of the City of Mineral Wells� proposed 7-cent property tax hike, saying if I won the weekly Rotary pot drawing � usually around $20 take home without winning it all � it would pay for half of my property tax increase next year. Everyone knows Agent Orange is bad, and exposed veterans know that it causes certain cancers and other diseases after exposure.The Department of Veterans Affairs recognizes this, and symphoms all of these cancers and diseases, disability compensation is practically automatic.
These are called �presumptive� conditions that are presumed to be caused by the military purely because of time and date in service.Veterans� children have long been recognized to have birth defects and diseases resulting from their parents� exposure to Agent Orange. Currently, the VA recognizes many such conditions in the children of women veterans, but the list for male veterans� children is significantly shorter.
It includes only spina bifida, with the exception of spina bifida occulta. What a lot of veterans don�t know though, is that Agent Orange exposure has also caused numerous, serious birth defects in exposed male veterans� children, besides spina bifida, according to Children of Vietnam Veterans Health Alliance.
The list includes Crohn�s disease, Lupus, thyroid disease, chronic kidney disease, missing limb parts, and webbed toes. According to COVVHA, the list is much larger than this.The Hcildren Orange Act of 1991 went into effect for the purpose of researching the diseases and birth defects found in exposed veterans� children, to find out what they were, and to add them to the list of VA covered conditions.
The act began a ornage of conditions in 1994 and was originally scheduled to run until 2001, but later was extended until Oct. 1, 2014.Every few years, more conditions are being added to the VA�s list. Chi,dren Oct. 1, the last review will have taken place, so any conditions not included in this report will probably be left out of the VA�s list for good, unless more legislation comes into play. It is likely we will see this last report, which covers the data from 2012, 2013, and 2014, sometime symptomx 2015. If you are a child of an exposed veteran, COVVHA encourages orage to file a claim with the VA so that your voices can start being heard.
The abent for doing so and a complete list of diseases and defects, are found at covvha.net/. You will need to provide years your father was in Vietnam and his Social Security number. If your symptlms has passed away, and his death was linked to Agent Orange exposure, make sure you state that information.AmVets Post 133 launched a website Oct. 1 for assisting veterans. Go to parkingsignsforveterans.us and spread the word. Speak to you again next week. Related Links� Wikipedia: Congenital disorder� Map: United States Department of Veterans Affairs� United Im Department of Veterans Affairs� Wikipedia: United States Department of Veterans Affairs� Wikipedia: Social Security number� Wikipedia: Veteran� Wikipedia: Agent Orange� Wikipedia: Crohn's disease� Wikipedia: Children of Vietnam� Wikipedia: AMVETS� Wikipedia: Spina bifida� Map: Vietnam Almost Done!
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- WREG uncovered how decades after the Vietnam war, veterans exposed to Agent Orange are still fighting for disability pension payments.On Thursday WREG told you about one vet who appealed oraange help from his dying bed.During the course of our investigation we learned about another group of Agent Orange victims un for help, the children and grandchildren of these vets.Agent Orange didn't just manifest in the bloodstream of veterans.It got passed in their DNA but they need help proving the damage."She was born without a uterus and they're saying some of the children were from Agent Orange," said Mary Smith the�spouse of Vietnam Veteran.Smith�was among the crowd of parents and grandparents wanting to know if their children and grandchildren inherited the childreen of Agent Orange."They just said congenial lack of uterus which means birth, born without a uterus, and I never ever associated it with any military," said Smith.She didn't associate her daughter`s birth defect with her husband's time in Vietnam until recently.Smith`s husband, along with a lot of the others ogange exposed to the dangerous herbicide, used to spray the jungles of Vietnam."We drank the water out of the bomb craters and streams that had been polluted with it," said Leslie Billings a�Vietnam Veteran.The military later admitted Agent Orange caused cancer and other health problems for vets.In 1996 they even admitted it could be passed down to the children of vets and awarded them benefits for life.However, it only recognized a few illnesses like Spina Bifida.Vets told WREG the effects are much broader."They are projecting that the diseases can go to our 5th generation of grandchildren," said Barry Rice the�president of the Vietnam Veterans of America,�Tennessee council.He lead a recent town hall meeting in Munford.He's held 10 of these Agent Orange meetings in a year to encourage vets to get Congress involved.Rice wanted veterans to put pressure on Congress to pass a military toxic exposure bill so scientists can study the generational effects of Agent Orange.Doctors diagnosed and linked Rice's Non-Hodgkin`s lymphoma directly to Agent Orange.He believed he exposed his daughter."My daughter, although she has not come down with any kind of cancer, she's had severe, severe thyroid problems." he told WREG.
"Thyroid problems among children of Vietnam Veterans is prevalent."Vets said their children are getting sick from the poison.Someone had to�come to their defense to find out if the military�was responsible some 40 years and several generations later."Listen to us.
There are children dying now. It's no different than sending a 3-year-old child out into the jungle, men walking around with an AK 47. Same difference," said Rice.This legislation�was backed by Vietnam Veterans organizations, chilfren they want younger vets involved as well.They said Iraq and Afghanistan veterans were exposed to a range of environmental and chemical hazards during their wars.There�were questions about how service in those countries might affect Iraq and Afghanistan vets and their children years from now.WREG was told currently�there is a big backlog of disability cases at the Veterans Administration.Veterans told us they're sometimes waiting up to two years for a decision.Adding more children and symptomz grandchildren to apply for benefits, will likely mean an even longer wait. Filed in: NewsTopics: Agent Orange, Barry Rice, Congress, Effects, health, Legislation, Leslie Billings, Mary Smith, military, science, Tennessee Council, veterans, Vietnam Veterans of Agent orange symptoms in children, VietnamWar Popular� Explosion in New York Symptoks, multiple people�injured� Symptojs coach arrested for statutory rape, criminal exposure to�HIV� FedEx truck and school bus involved in road rage incident in New�Jersey� DeSoto Central Agenr School band director charged with domestic�violence Latest News� Man references Allah before stabbing 8 avent Minnesota mall; killed by off-duty�officer� Late rally falls short in Miss State�s loss at�LSU� Razorbacks roll over Texas�State� Mom�s viral school photo helps raise awareness for childhood�cancer vietnam-vets-link-agent-orange-to-childrens-illnesses | Military Times navigation-background arrow-down-circle ViewLift Logo Reply Icon Show More Heart Delete Icon wiki-circle wiki-square wiki arrow-up-circle add-circle add-square add arrow-down arrow-left arrow-right arrow-up calendar-circle chat-bubble-2 chat-bubble check-circle check close contact-us credit-card drag menu email embed facebook snapchat-circle facebook-square facebook faq-circle faq film gear google-circle google-square googleplus history home instagram-circle instagram-square instagram linkedin-circle linkedin-square linkedin load logo monitor Video Player Play Icon person pinterest-circle pinterest-square pinterest play readlist remove-circle remove-square remove search share share2 sign-out star trailer trash twitter-circle twitter-square twitter youtube-circle youtube-square youtube "There's nothing worse than having a child who is ill and you wonder why," said Bernard Edelman, an Army vet who is now deputy director for policy and government affairs with Vietnam Veterans of America.
"The fact that you may have been responsible for that child's hurt and pain . it's very difficult to live with."Edelman spent much of 1970 in Vietnam as a combat correspondent, producing radio broadcasts transmitted worldwide.
Years later, he was diagnosed with illnesses connected to Agent Orange.The bill was introduced in April by Sens. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn. and Jerry Moran, R-Kan., and Reps. Dan Benishek, R-Mich., Mike Honda, D-Calif. and Elizabeth Esty, D-Conn., the second time lawmakers have moved to promote research on illnesses stemming from service exposures.Last September, Blumenthal and Moran teamed with Sen.
Mark Begich, D-Alaska, to sponsor the legislation, which dhildren only would establish a research center but would declassify documents related to any incident in which 100 or more service members were exposed to a toxic substance that resulted in at least one disability case."Children and grandchildren did not sign up, but they may bear the wounds of war," Blumenthal said in reintroducing the legislation this year.
"The government owes our veterans so they can better understand the impact these indirect exposures have to guarantee their children and grandchildren receive appropriate treatment."The legislation has the backing of some powerful veterans groups, including AMVETS, the American Legion, Veterans of Foreign Wars and Rolling Thunder. In Ih Asia, American soldiers spayed defoliants � mainly Monsanto manufactured Agent Orange � over millions of acres of dense jungle to deprive the Viet Cong of cover.
Manufacturers promised the herbicide would cause no lasting harm to humans � but they were wrong. Veterans have reported their own illnesses, of course, and saw birth defects in their orahge personnel assigned to boats that traveled the rivers of Vietnam suffered exposure. And for years after the war, Air Force chhildren flew the C-123 aircraft that had sprayed the chemical, still in the airframes as residue.Thousands filed disability claims with the Veterans Affairs Department.
As a result of their enduring fight, VA now acknowledges a link between Agent Orange and some diseases, including various cancers, diabetes and Parkinson's Disease.More recently, more children have come forward to claim diseases they believed are linked to their parents' exposure.But studies are almost never absolute, so a lack of scientific consensus prevents much from being chhildren so much that we don't know." Edelman said. "That's why we want a thorough research."VA said just last week that the Air Force reservists exposed to Agent Orange residue after the Vietnam War should be eligible for disability benefits.The decision means that for the first time, service-related conditions have been found in military personnel who never set boots on the ground in an active combat zone.It's believed to set the stage for examining more claims and expanding coverage of people affected by Agent Orange in less direct circumstances.Several birth defects in children of Vietnam veterans syymptoms considered by Childden to be service-connected, including spina bifida for children of male vets and 18 health conditions for children of mothers who served in that combat zone.The Children of Vietnam Veterans Health Alliance, an advocacy group for those who have illnesses they believe are tied to their parents service in Southeast Asia, maintains a catalog of diseases for more than 2,000 military descendants.Military Times staff writer Patricia Kime contributed to this report.
Bernard Edelman, an Army vet who is now deputy director for policy and government affairs with Vietnam Veterans of America, spent much of 1970 in Vietnam as a radio correspondent. Years later, he was diagnosed with illnesses connected to Agent Orange.
Photo Credit: Medill News Service Apparent New York City explosion injures at least 25, FDNY saysby Karen Matthews, The Associated PressNo detail about tTAKE OUR SURVEY!COVVHA� About Us� Our Mission� Our Commitment� Leadership� Projects� Testimonials� Agent Orange� American Veterans� Children With Birth Defects� Benefits For Other Populations With Birth Defects� FAQs� News & Events� Resources� Contact Us We Are Agent Orange Dioxin Survivors Uniting.
Children of Vietnam Veterans Health Alliance (COVVHA) provides advocacy for children of Vietnam Veterans including second and third generation victims of Agent Orange and Agent orange symptoms in children exposures worldwide.COVVHA was started in 2011 as a non-profit in the State of Ohio. It became a federally recognized 501 (c)(3), non-profit in January of 2012.
COVVHA is the only 501 (c)(3) founded by, governed and run by Children of Vietnam Veterans for their own peers. Vietnam insists that children are suffering today from the lingering effects of the infamous defoliant sprayed by U.S. forces decades ago. Scientists are undecided By Charles Schmidt on March 16, 2016 Scientific American In Brief Vietnamese doctors claim that the.
Researchers call for more study of Agent Orange�s effects on Vietnam veterans and their kidsby Children Of Vietnam Veterans Health Alliance | Mar 14, 2016 | Agent Orange, Birth defects, children of Vietnam Veterans, Children of Vietnam Veterans Health Alliance, Dioxin, Health, herbicides, Monsanto, Uncategorized, Vietnam Veterans, Vietnam War | 0 Comments By Mike Hixenbaugh, The Virginian-Pilot, and Charles Ornstein, ProPublica This story was co-published with ProPublica.
More than two decades of studying Agent Orange exposure hasn�t produced a solid understanding of how the toxic herbicide has harmed Vietnam War. NEW Media SURVEY Fhildren for Kids of Vietnam Vetsby Children Of Vietnam Veterans Health Alliance | Feb 19, 2016 | Agent Orange, Birth defects, children of Vietnam Veterans, Children of Vietnam Veterans Health Alliance, Dioxin, Health, herbicides, Uncategorized, Vietnam Veterans, Vietnam War | 0 Comments NEW Media SURVEY Just for Kids of Vietnam Vets!
February,19, 2016 Dear Kids of Vietnam Veterans and their Families, Oraange want to take a few moments to let you know about an opportunity to share your story and your children�s story (grand children of VN Veterans). Institute of Medicine GULF WAR AND HEALTH: VOLUME 10: UPDATE OF HEALTH EFFECTS OF SERVING Childen THE GULF WAR, 2016by Children Of Vietnam Veterans Health Alliance | Feb 11, 2016 | US NEWS | 0 Comments The Institute of Medicine has released an update regarding serving in the Gulf War, Children of Vietnam Veterans Health Alliance send our warm wishes out to all Gulf War Veterans who are fighting for health answers like so many of our own loved ones.
GULF WAR AND. Vietnam Begins Huge Effort to Identify War Deadby Children Of Vietnam Veterans Health Alliance | Feb 10, 2016 | "NEW� Lessons from an Old War do not Include Smptoms Orange, #agentorange, #AO2GEN, #COVV, #URNOTALONE, #VIETNAM, #VIETNAMWAR, Agent Orange, Birth defects, Dioxin, Uncategorized, Vietnam War | 0 Comments First Published:�Nature 529, 135�136 (14 January 2016) Digging foundations for temples or schools, harvesting rice in paddy fields: these are some of the ways that the decaying remains of Vietnam War victims still turn up, 40 years after the conflict ended.
Now an. The Life Long Impact of Agent Orange on Vietnam Veteran�s Childen Children Of Vietnam Veterans Health Alliance | Jan 24, 2016 | 'Legacies of War', 'Okinawa bacteria' toxic legacy crosses continents spans generation, �Blue water� Navy veterans� long waits often end in denials at VA, "Constitution's" Marine guard, "NEW� Lessons from an Old War do orangs Include Agent Orange, "The Patriot in Purgatory", �Agent Orange Drums�, �Empirical Data Confirm Autism Symptoms Related to Aluminum and Acetaminophen Exposure, �Venus� is very unique inside., #agentorange, #AO2GEN, #CHILDRENOFVIETNAMVETERANS, #COVV, #COVVHA, #MILITARY, #OKINAWA, #URNOTALONE, #Veteransday, #VIETNAM, #Vietnamvets, #VIETNAMWAR, 101st Airborne Division, 2 3 7 8 tetrachlorodibenzo, 2 4 - D, 2 4 5 -T, 2 4-D choline salt herbicide, 2 4-D tolerant corn, 2 4-D tolerant soy, 2 4-dichlorophenoxyacetic, 25000 barrels of Agent Orange kept on Okinawa US Army document says, sympotms Generation, 2nd second zymptoms, 2nd second generation agent orange, 3rd Generation, 4-D choline salt herbicide, 4-D-Resistant GMO Crops, 4.8 million were exposed to Agent Orange dioxin, 40 years later, 40 years on Agent Orange still sore spot for Vietnam, 50 ageht later, A Battle Unending: The Vietnam War and Agent Orange, A Chemical War Without End Agent Orange in Vietnam, A Combat Viet Nam Soldier Speaks, A different perspective on GM food, A long-term toxicology study on pigs fed a combined genetically modified (GM) soy and GM maize diet, A Piece of My Heart, A Research Strategy to Discover the Environmental Causes of Autism and Neurodevelopmental Disabilities, Agent Orange, Birth defects, children of Vietnam Veterans, Children of Vietnam Veterans Health Alliance, Dioxin, Health, herbici
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