The U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) has expanded access to benefits for veterans suffering from cancers possibly linked to burn pits used for waste disposal on military bases.
The expanded list applies to veterans who deployed to the Middle East and Central Asia during the Gulf War and after Sept. 11, 2001. It now includes acute and chronic leukemias, multiple myelomas, myelodysplastic syndromes, myelofibrosis, and cancers of the bladder and urinary tract.
Veterans whose claims for those cancers were previously denied should apply again, the department said.
“Adding these presumptives lowers the burden of proof for veterans to get the benefits they deserve for the conditions that followed them home from war,” VA Secretary Denis McDonough said in a statement. “We encourage veterans with these conditions—and all veterans—to apply today for the benefits they deserve today.”
The changes are part of the Promise to Address Comprehensive Toxics (PACT) Act of 2022, addressing illnesses that may stem from exposures to harmful chemicals during military service, particularly Agent Orange in Vietnam, toxins from burn pits, and contaminated water. Under the act, the VA presumes that a veteran’s illness is service-connected if he or she served in a certain place at a certain time.
Beau Biden, who died in 2015 at the age of 46, served in 2009 at Balad Air Force Base, 50 miles north of Baghdad, the Iraqi capital. The base’s burn pit burned around the clock, incinerating several hundred tons of waste a day.
“Science has recognized there are certain carcinogens when people are exposed to [burn pit smoke],” Biden said in an interview with PBS. “Depending on the quantities and the amount in the water and the air, [it] can have a carcinogenic impact on the body.”
Burn pits were commonly used at U.S. military bases in Iraq and Afghanistan to dispose of materials such as tires, paints, solvents, fabrics, batteries, and human waste, often with jet fuel as an accelerant. Use of burn pits declined after Congress passed legislation in 2009 limiting the practice.