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Kan. veteran worries exposure to hazardous fumes cause of health problems

U.S. Army veteran Brandon Garrison, right, talks with his father, Stephen Traglio, who also served in the Army. Garrison served in Afghanistan and now has several health conditions that he says may be linked to the burn pits used to dispose of waste at U.S. military bases there.-photo by Andy Marso
U.S. Army veteran Brandon Garrison, right, talks with his father, Stephen Traglio, who also served in the Army. Garrison served in Afghanistan and now has several health conditions that he says may be linked to the burn pits used to dispose of waste at U.S. military bases there.-photo by Andy Marso

By Andy Marso
KHI News Service

KANSAS CITY, Kan. — Four months ago, U.S. Army veteran Brandon Garrison played in an all-day softball tournament, a fundraiser for the Wounded Warrior Project.

“The tournament was on a Saturday,” Garrison said. “The next day I woke up and I couldn’t walk.”

Garrison, a 28-year-old from Leavenworth, experienced debilitating muscle pain for several days and was hospitalized at a U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs facility. He left with a cane that he was still using last month.
After multiple wartime deployments to Afghanistan as an infantryman and a supply specialist, Garrison has health conditions that are explainable: traumatic brain injury from the concussive blasts of explosives and post-traumatic stress disorder from the strain of combat. But he also has conditions that are harder to explain: nerve twitches, muscle weakness, fibromyalgia, chronic prostatitis, low testosterone.

In researching those symptoms in U.S. soldiers, he came across websites like Burn Pits 360, where other veterans discussed the potential hazards associated with the massive open air burn pits used to dispose of waste at U.S. military bases in Iraq and Afghanistan. Garrison used those pits in his supply role. He remembered some of the things that were thrown into them: feces, human remains, the carcasses of diseased animals, batteries, spent ammunition casings, medical waste.

“We were taking used vehicle parts that had transmission fluid, hydraulic fluid, things like that and throwing them in these burn pits,” he said. “My job was to turn this stuff in. If it’s unserviceable, we disposed of it. Tires. Paint, I’m sure. Any one of those things, if you burn it stateside, you can get written up for it because it’s a hazard.”

At the time, he didn’t think about it. He was worried about other things. But now he wonders what he might have inhaled, and how much of it.

“I was making multiple trips to these burn pits a day,” Garrison said. “Multiple.”

Great unknowns

Many veterans of the Iraq and Afghanistan conflicts believe their health was affected by exposure to the burn pits and other potential environmental hazards. But there is not enough data to determine whether that exposure caused or contributed to the health problems they are struggling with now that they are home.

It took decades for the military to assess the health damage done by Agent Orange, a mix of chemicals used to defoliate the jungles of Vietnam and Korea while American troops were fighting in those countries.

Garrison fears the burn pits could be “the Agent Orange of our generation.”

The U.S. Department of Defense says there is not enough information on burn pit exposures to draw definitive conclusions about their health effects, and it continues to study the issue.
The VA website states that “at this time research does not show evidence of long-term health problems” associated with burn pit exposure. That preliminary conclusion is based on a 2011 National Institute of Medicine report that stated researchers did not have enough data to determine whether there were any long-term effects.

So, the research continues.

A Vanderbilt University researcher studying returning veterans at Fort Campbell who complained of shortness of breath found that the chronic lung disease constrictive bronchiolitis was widespread among those studied and “was possibly associated with inhalational exposure.”

More studies on “deployment related lung disease” are under way at National Jewish Health in Denver, which bills itself as the nation’s top respiratory hospital.

Some veterans are not waiting for the results of further study.

A group of them filed a class action lawsuit against Kellogg, Brown & Root, the military contractor responsible for waste disposal efforts overseas. Other attorneys are pushing for claims from soldiers who served at a long list of sites where burn pits were used.

Last year Congress and President Barack Obama approved a law establishing a burn pit registry where veterans can sign up to track changes in their health and get research updates.

Difficult to diagnose

Robert Miller, a pulmonary specialist at Vanderbilt’s medical school, started getting calls from Fort Campbell-area health care providers in 2004. Thousands of Army troops were returning from their first deployments overseas and dozens were reporting shortness of breath while exercising.
Flummoxed doctors referred the soldiers to Miller. Initial pulmonary tests and X-rays were normal. But something was wrong. Men and women who were in excellent physical condition when they deployed were struggling to run two miles when they returned.

“That was the picture that we were seeing,” Miller said in a recent phone interview. “So we started doing lung biopsies on them.”

Of the 49 biopsies, nearly all showed abnormalities, and 38 of the 49 showed constrictive bronchiolitis, a scarring of the small airways in the lungs that impairs function when lungs are strained.

“It’s essentially (like) trying to breathe through a straw when you’re running,” Miller said.

About three-fourths of the initial group of soldiers biopsied had been exposed to a significant sulfur mine fire while in Iraq. That initially was identified as a possible cause of the lung distress.

But as Miller and his colleagues continued with the biopsies, they found that the “vast majority” continued to show signs of constrictive bronchiolitis, even as the share of those exposed to the sulfur fire dropped below 50 percent.

The test results, Miller said, indicated the lung condition was somehow connected to the soldiers’ deployment to Iraq but not necessarily to exposure to the fumes produced by burn pit fires.

“We don’t know the exact source for their exposure. We just know … the things associated with deployment, so we make a list,” Miller said. “On that list are dust storms, particulate matter and burn pits, diesel fumes, battlefield smoke, all those things. Although I’m very concerned about the burn pits, we have never made a claim that is the cause. We make a very strong claim these diseases are associated with deployments.”

That, itself, was significant.

Miller said constrictive bronchiolitis usually is found in patients with rheumatoid arthritis of the lungs or in organ recipients who reject a transplanted heart or lungs. It’s also been documented in people with “toxic exposures” who inhaled things like nerve agents or dust from popcorn flavoring in food processing plants.

“It’s not something that occurs randomly,” Miller said. “That’s the key thing. You don’t find constrictive bronchiolitis in unexposed, otherwise healthy young adults. You just don’t.”

Yet that was the age group in which Miller and his team were seeing it, and other physicians began seeing it too.

“I think I stumbled upon the sentinel case, at least here (in Kansas),” said Michael Crosser, a pulmonologist at the University of Kansas Hospital.

Late in 2008, a soldier who returned from a deployment in Iraq and had been treated at Munson Army Health Center in Leavenworth for complaints of shortness of breath while exercising was referred to Crosser.

The man was a nonsmoker, and there was a clear change in his exercise capacity since his deployment. But just as with Miller’s soldiers, the initial tests were clear.

Then Crosser saw Miller’s research published in the New England Journal of Medicine. He tried to convince a surgeon to do a biopsy of his patient’s lung.

“For most surgeons, they’ll say, ‘You want me to biopsy what and why? He’s got normal functions, his CAT scan’s normal,’” he said.

Crosser forwarded Miller’s abstract to the surgeon and pressed his case.

“I said, ‘I’ve got a believable patient who is symptomatic, who has been exposed and I think he has this condition. This is what I’m looking for,’” he said. “And that’s certainly what I found.”

Miller said stories like that are common.

“I have inquiries from all around the country,” he said.

Both Miller and Crosser have ceased doing lung biopsies on veterans with suspected constrictive bronchiolitis, because it’s an invasive, painful procedure with risk of complications and even if the disease is definitively diagnosed, there are no proven treatment options. All doctors can do is recommend that their patients avoid further exposure to whatever caused the condition.

Having the diagnosis can help veterans procure disability benefits. But even with a diagnosis some struggle to obtain benefits, Miller said.

“It has been a very difficult process, which is part of the reason I started advocating for these guys,” Miller said. “I’ve seen them, I know they’re limited and I know there’s a link between that limitation and deployment.”

‘I’ve been there’

Garrison, the Army veteran from Leavenworth, qualified for disability benefits because of other conditions that have made resuming civilian life difficult.

When he first returned in 2007, he tried to get behavioral health services, but the wait was long because of the influx of other soldiers trying to do the same. So he decided to see a primary care doctor, who prescribed Valium.

“So I started popping those,” Garrison said.

Soon after, he said, the combination of a bucket of Bud Lights and “three or four Valiums” in one day landed him in a private hospital, where he woke up with a Vietnam veteran standing over him.

“He looks at me, and he says, ‘I know where you’re at brother; I’ve been there. And if you allow me to help you, I’ll take you upstairs. I know some people who can do some good,’” Garrison said.

That was the beginning of a two-month stay at an inpatient psychiatric ward, followed by four more months at Walter Reed Army Medical Center, where he was treated for PTSD and traumatic brain injury.

From there he returned to the Kansas City area, where he had the support of family, friends and former Leavenworth-area Kansas legislators Candy Ruff and Melanie Meier.

“Those two ladies have been in my corner since day one,” Garrison said. “They’re amazing people.”

Still, Garrison struggled in his post-military transition.

He was a good student before he enlisted, but when he tried to go back to school after the war he found that the college coursework didn’t seem relevant to his life, and he had trouble concentrating. He argued with his parents and his wife, fights he now acknowledges were mostly his fault.

“Most of the time it was because of stupid things I was saying or doing,” Garrison said. “The way I reacted to things, the way I saw things. I was a totally different person when I got back.”

Garrison and his wife tried to move to an Operation Homefront village in San Antonio that provided free housing for veterans. But their marriage was falling apart and she left.

“Actually, I told her to leave me,” Garrison said. “Biggest mistake of my life.”

He made another attempt at school, enrolling at Schreiner University in Kerrville, Texas, and took pride in making the baseball team at the small college.

But that was when the chronic muscle aches started. Then one day he collapsed on the field.

“Ended up in a VA hospital,” Garrison said. “They just told me that ‘maybe you were dehydrated.’”

He was given fluids for several days and felt better, but there were other warning signs. He had widespread bruising and testing revealed his levels of CPK, an enzyme that leaks into the bloodstream when muscles are damaged, were “extremely elevated.”

High CPK levels also can be indicative of brain injury . Garrison was still fighting the effects of his traumatic brain injury and PTSD as he stayed alone in his loft apartment.

“I would fall asleep pointing my weapon because I was convinced somebody was going to come up that damn stairway,” he said. “Living alone is not good for me.”

He moved back home with his parents in Leavenworth and, after several unfulfilling jobs, found one that seemed to stick: working for the Federal Bureau of Prisons.

“I was needed in an environment like that,” Garrison said. “You respond to calls, you’re back in the action. I got along with inmates and other guards better than (with co-workers) in any previous job.”

Then came August, the Wounded Warrior softball fundraiser and the return of the muscle pain.

That pain has not been definitively connected to burn pit exposures, but something Garrison’s urologist told him recently again made him think of the pit fumes he inhaled.

“She told me, quote, ‘I believe you were exposed to a neurotoxin or neuroagent,’” Garrison said. “She proceeded to tell me that she has seen several veterans my age and younger who have been diagnosed with this same thing I was diagnosed with two weeks ago: chronic prostatitis.”

Soldiers deployed to Iraq and Afghanistan were exposed to other things, like the 2003 sulfur mine fire, chlorine gas attacks, titanium dust and abandoned, long-dormant chemical weapons.

And burn pits have been used on military bases for decades. Garrison’s father, who is now battling brain cancer, remembers using one when he was deployed to Ethiopia.

But Garrison wonders if there ever have been pits as big as the one he used at Bagram Airfield, which he estimated was between five and 10 acres long. The fumes from that pit have been a subject of study by the U.S. Army.

“It’s hovering over the entire base, so anybody who’s outside is breathing this in,” Garrison said. “Even the little computer guy who goes to and from Pizza Hut every day. Nobody was free of these exposures.”

Andy Marso is a reporter for Heartland Health Monitor, a news collaboration focusing on health issues and their impact in Missouri and Kansas.

Chipotle apologizes for NY worker’s police protest

Screen Shot 2014-12-30 at 5.30.56 AMNEW YORK (AP) — Two Chipotle chief executives have apologized to New York City police officers who were greeted by a restaurant employee making the “hands up, don’t shoot” gesture popular with protesters.

Co-Chief Executive Officers Steve Ells and Monty Moran said in a statement Monday that the employee’s action appeared to be spontaneous. They said it happened at one of their Brooklyn restaurants on Dec. 16 when a group of nine police officers entered. They said the officers were not refused service, but chose to leave after encountering the gesture while in line.

The executives said appropriate actions had been taken toward the crew member after the Denver-based Chipotle Mexican Grill Inc. reviewed video footage from security cameras. They said they could not discuss what actions were taken.

Response to Kansas Medicaid suit alleges extortion

Screen Shot 2014-12-29 at 3.44.57 PMTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A firm managing part of the Medicaid program in Kansas and its parent company allege in court documents that a former executive tried to “extort” $3 million from them after being fired.

Sunflower State Health Plan and parent Centene Corporation made the allegations Monday in response to a federal lawsuit filed in October by former Sunflower Vice President Jacqueline Leary.

Leary alleges in her lawsuit that she was wrongfully fired in January after protesting potentially improper cost-cutting moves for the Kansas Medicaid program.

Sunflower and Centene said Leary demanded $3 million from them in February. Leary attorney Lewis Galloway did not immediately return a telephone message seeking comment.

Medicaid covers health services for the poor and disabled. Kansas has turned its administration over to three private companies, including Sunflower.

US rig count plummets last week

oilHOUSTON (AP) — Oilfield services company Baker Hughes Inc. says the number of rigs exploring for oil and natural gas in the U.S. plunged by 35 last week to 1,840.

The Houston firm said Monday in its weekly report that 1,499 rigs were exploring for oil and 340 for gas. One was listed as miscellaneous. A year ago 1,757 rigs were active.

Of the major oil- and gas-producing states, Oklahoma gained four rigs, Ohio rose by two and Louisiana and Colorado were up one each.

California dropped by 17, Texas lost 16 and North Dakota and West Virginia were down three apiece. Alaska, Kansas, New Mexico, Pennsylvania and Wyoming each fell by one.

Arkansas and Utah were unchanged.

The U.S. rig count peaked at 4,530 in 1981 and bottomed at 488 in 1999.

Man jailed for trying to choke his wife with Christmas wrap

Screen Shot 2014-12-29 at 5.08.00 PMST. PETERS, Mo. (AP) – Police say a Missouri man used a roll of wrapping paper to choke his wife on Christmas.

The St. Louis Post-Dispatch reports police arrested 26-year-old David Anderson Hampton Jr. for the assault in the St. Louis suburb of St. Peters.

Online court records didn’t indicate an attorney.

The woman told police she blacked out during the Christmas attack.

Hampton was charged with felony domestic assault and is being held in the St. Charles County Jail in lieu of paying a $50,000 cash-only bail.

Being uninsured in America will cost you more

Healthcare.govRICARDO ALONSO-ZALDIVAR, Associated Press

WASHINGTON (AP) — Being uninsured in America will cost you more in 2015.

It’s the first year all taxpayers have to report to the Internal Revenue Service whether they had health insurance for the previous year, as required under President Barack Obama’s law.

Those who were uninsured face fines, unless they qualify for one of about 30 exemptions, most of which involve financial hardships.

Many people don’t realize it, but those fines are going up significantly in 2015.

Dayna Dayson of Phoenix estimates that she’ll have to pay the taxman about $290 on her federal return.

Dayson is in her early 30s. She works in marketing, and doesn’t have a lot left over each month.

She says she’d like health insurance, but it just didn’t fit into her budget.

Mo. man hospitalized after crash with semi

Missouri Highway Patrol  MHPBUTLER – A Missouri man was injured in an accident just before 8:30 a.m. on Monday in Bates County.

The Missouri State Highway Patrol reported a 2012 Chevy driven by Buford Hockett, 88, Adrian, was turning eastbound on MO 18, just east of County Road NW 8001. The vehicle turned into the path of a semi. Hocket was ejected out of the driver’s side door.

Hocket was transported to Bates County Memorial Hospital and then to Research Hospital in Kansas.

The driver of the 2007 Kenworth semi was not injured.

The MSHP reported Hocket was not wearing a seat belt.

NE Kansas church reports major theft after Christmas

Burglary  BUCYRUS, Kan. (AP) — A small Catholic parish in eastern Kansas is suffering a blow to its Christmas spirit.

The pastor of the Queen of the Holy Rosary Catholic Church in Bucyrus, Kansas, told his congregation Sunday that someone had cleaned out the church’s safe sometime after Christmas.

KSHB-TV reports  the Rev. Larry Albertson told his congregation to cancel any checks they wrote to the church. He said someone who knew where things were located in the church opened the safe and walked off with contributions made during five Christmas Masses. The thief then returned the key to the safe.

Albertson estimates the loss is close to $15,000.

Bucyrus, an unincorporated town of about 200 people, is about 30 miles south of Kansas City, Missouri.

Outdoor outfitter Cabela’s bank released from FDIC order

FDICOMAHA, Neb. (AP) — The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. has terminated a consent order against World’s Foremost Bank, a Lincoln-based credit card operation set up by the outdoor outfitter Cabela’s.

The Lincoln Journal says the order was ended Nov. 4 but not announced publicly until Monday. The original order in March required World’s Foremost Bank to pay a $1 million penalty and restitution to about 1.8 million card holders for what the FDIC said were deceptive and unfair acts. The bank agreed to the sanctions but did not admit or deny the violations.

FDIC spokeswoman LaJuan Williams-Young says a termination order typically indicates “that the bank has complied with the original stipulations” in the consent order. She declined to comment further. A bank representative didn’t immediately return a call from The Associated Press.

Police: Man jailed for Facebook police threats, referenced Mo. shooting

facebookMCDONALD, Pa. (AP) — A southwestern Pennsylvania man has been jailed on charges he posted Facebook comments encouraging people to kill police the same day a man fatally shot two New York City officers.

The (Washington) Observer-Reporter says Steven Drake Jr. was arrested Wednesday in McDonald. Police there were alerted to the Dec. 20 posts by officers in a nearby community.

Among the comments Drake allegedly posted were, “The police brought this on themselves! I say kill them all! Enough is enough.”

The 29-year-old from Midway faces a preliminary hearing Jan. 6 on charges including terroristic threats and disorderly conduct. Online court records don’t list an attorney for him.

Police say Drake acknowledged making the posts, which also referenced the recent police killings of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri, and Eric Garner in New York City.

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