The study results, published this month in the peer-reviewed Journal of Occupational and Environmental Medicine, looked at 1991 Gulf War veterans' self-reports of hearing chemical alarms going off during the war. Previous estimates have suggested chemical alarms sounded tens of thousands of times across the Gulf War theater of operations during the six-week war to oust Iraqi military occupying forces from Kuwait.
A pair of studies in 2012 by Dr.'s James Haley and James Tuite provided new evidence that supports that chemical plumes from destroyed Iraqi chemical warfare production and storage facilities drifted down over and exposed large numbers of Gulf War troops to low-levels of sarin, mustard, and other Iraqi chemical warfare agents.
These latest findings were written by cognitive neuroscientist Linda Chao, PhD, who has a long track record of Gulf War-related research and peer-reviewed publication funded by the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA).
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SOURCE: PubMed, Dr. Linda Chao, Principal Investigator
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27513172#
ARCHIVED ABSTRACT:
J Occup Environ Med. 2016 Oct;58(10):1014-1020.
Associations Between the Self-Reported Frequency of Hearing Chemical Alarms in Theater and Visuospatial Function in Gulf War Veterans.
Chao LL1.
Never heard of this info gathering before. Would love to see a list of units that was put together. I suspect it's incomplete if mine is missing. We also had positive year's for nerve agents that was ignored.
ReplyDeleteI never heard of this info gathering and would love to see the complete list of units gathered. I suspect it's incomplete. We had alarms and positive test's for nerve agents that were ignored.
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