The Weekly Vista

List of Camp Lejeune Illnesses May Expand

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The Department of Veterans Affairs is considerin­g adding eight new presumptiv­es to the Camp Lejeune toxic chemical-exposure list, and invites your input. This proposed rule would add eight service-related illnesses for those active duty, reserve and National Guard members who served at Camp Lejeune for a minimum of 30 days between Aug. 1, 1953 and Dec. 31, 1987. Those illnesses are: adult leukemia, aplastic anemia and other myelodyspl­astic

syndromes, bladder cancer, kidney cancer, liver cancer, multiple myeloma, non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma and Parkinson’s disease. Camp Lejeune was found in the 1980s to have toxic chemicals — such as dry cleaning fluid, benzene and vinyl chloride — in the water supply. The Hadnot Point and Tarawa Terrace wells had been used since the 1950s, and affected tens of thousands of service personnel and their families. Veterans have suffered with Parkinson’s, multiple cancers (including kidney, breast, prostate), scleroderm­a, arthritis, respirator­y illnesses, lymphoma, multiple myeloma and much more. The damage hasn’t been limited to those who lived at the base: Children born later have had multiple health problems, as well as serious birth defects. The VA wants to think about the additional presumptiv­es and is setting up a 30-day comment period that will end on Oct. 10, 2016. To add your comment, go here: www.regulation­s.gov and put Camp Lejeune in the search box. Look for ID: VA-2016-VBA-0021-0001. To learn more about the Camp Lejeune water history, go here: www.tftptf.com. *** On another note, if you need a routine hearing or vision appointmen­t, by the end of the year you’ll no longer need to be referred by a primary-care provider. The Audiology and Optometry department­s will make your appointmen­t directly. This program started as a pilot last year and was apparently successful enough that they’re bringing it to all VA medical centers by the end of 2016.

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