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“”The balance of evidence is currently against there being a distinct Gulf War syndrome. Yet irrespective of the emerging professional consensus, Gulf War syndrome is established as a popular, media and social reality anyway. Investigating how and why this concept developed is important, but the answers will not come from statistics, but social sciences.[1]
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—Simon Wessely et al, 2001 |
Gulf War syndrome (GWS), sometimes known as Gulf War illnesses (GWI), is claimed as a medical condition with a wide variety of symptoms apparently contracted by people who were in the area of Kuwait around the 1990-1991 Gulf War, the one where George H. W. Bush and multinational armed forces (the "Coalition") kicked Saddam Hussein out of Kuwait in a short military operation, before stopping at the borders of Iraq. A number of causes connected to the war have been advanced, although there is no certain evidence linking any of the causes with symptoms described.
It is recognised as a medical condition by the US Department of Defense and US Department of Veterans Affairs.[2][3] However, despite studies showing that Gulf War veterans tend to self-report symptoms at rates far higher than other veterans, other researchers dispute the existence of GWS/GWI and say that there is not sufficient evidence to point to a distinct syndrome or to identify the causes of health problems reported by veterans.[4]
Saddam Hussein's troops invaded Kuwait on 2 August 1990; within 2 days, the country was almost entirely subdued. Over the following months, Coalition military personnel and support staff were deployed to bases in Saudi Arabia and elsewhere to prepare for military action. Military action began on 17 January 1991. On 28 February, George H. W. Bush declared that the war was over and Kuwait liberated.[5]
697,000 US personnel served, along with 53,462 British, 18,000 French, and large numbers of Saudi and other Middle Eastern troops.[6] Hundreds of thousands of Iraqis served on the other side, though their health is less often considered.
Reports of various ailments among former soldiers began over the next few years, and the US Congress created the Research Advisory Committee on Gulf War Veterans' Illnesses (RAC-GWVI) in 1998 to investigate more thoroughly. Since then, many studies have been conducted, but no consensus has been reached on the symptoms or cause of GWS/GWI.
Symptoms attributed to GWS/GWI include:[2]
A number of physical factors have been blamed. Note that a combination could be involved.
In addition, other non-physical causes could be factors.
A 1996 review published in the New England Journal of Medicine failed to find an increased level of illness or death in Gulf War veterans compared to other veterans.[11] Knoke and Gray in 1998 reached similar conclusions: "active-duty Gulf War veterans did not have excess unexplained illnesses resulting in hospitalization in the 4.67-year period following deployment."[12]
Research fails to indicate an increase in mortality rate, although there is some increase in suicide rates consistent with that seen in other combat veterans. Research has failed to find increased cancer rates in UK veterans. However, the Iowa Persian Gulf Study Group and subsequent studies have found that veterans have reported higher incidences of many symptoms than control groups.[13] Higher reporting rates could have many causes other than a higher presence of physical disorders; this is one of the main issues on GWS/GWI research.
This US Congressional-appointed body (the RAC-GWVI) found that GWS was a real and distinct physical condition.[2] The RAC-GWVI continues to fund research on GWS and report the result of studies.[3] It has repeatedly criticised the US Department of Veteran Affairs for its response and claims GWI is linked to chemical exposures, although the US Institute of Medicine disputed its findings.[4]
KCL has conducted considerable research, mainly on British veterans, but has found less clear evidence. A KCL study comparing British veterans of the Gulf War and Balkans wars found "the Gulf veterans were between two and three times more likely to report each and every one of the 50 somatic symptoms that were inquired about". They believed this could not be explained entirely by psychological disorders, but noted the limitations of studies based on self-reporting of symptoms.[13] As a result, in 2001 they suggested that there was not a distinctive pattern of symptoms associated with GWS, although there was clearly something going on that might be investigated as a social rather than medical phenomenon.[1]
They restated this position in 2008, claiming that while there is evidence of health problems in Gulf veterans, there is no identifiable constellation of symptoms that could be classed as a syndrome: "What we believe is that there is substantial evidence to suggest the existence of an identifiable Gulf health effect but that effect does not amount to a discrete disorder or indeed syndrome."[13]
Robert Haley is an American epidemiologist who claims to have evidence of central and peripheral nerve damage in Gulf War veterans and blames this on some combination of pesticides and chemical weapons. However, his studies lacked a control group and have been criticised by other researchers.[13]
There are various studies in animals which might indicate causes of GWS/GWI, although animal studies should be treated with caution because physiologically, animals are not people, and experimentally, it is hard for animal studies to match conditions experienced by human beings.
A large amount of research is carried out, with both positive and negative findings. The RAC-GWVI maintains a list on their website,[3] and databases such as Medline list many more. For example:
GWS was cited as a factor in the Murder of Tracie McBride by former US soldier Louis Jones, Jr; it was not accepted as mitigation and Jones was executed in 2003.
In her controversial book Hysterias, feminist academic Elaine Showalter claimed a wide range of things including GWS, chronic fatigue syndrome, recovered memory syndrome, multiple personality disorder, satanic ritual abuse, and alien abduction were all instances of hysteria. This theory was not exactly popular, with Showalter receiving death threats as a result.[10]
Conspiracy theorists claim that veterans with GWS were "poisoned by our own germ warfare agents developed by the U.S. military and sold in the 1980s to the Iraqis, who then used them against us in the Gulf War."[15] As mentioned above, chemical and biological agents may have been released accidentally, but there's no evidence of deliberate use.
The Good News. The Solution to The Gulf War Syndrome lies in the implementation of safe and effective naturopathic/homeovitic protocols which serve to detoxify the body of various viral, bacterial, fungal, chemical and metallic toxins while restoring neuro-immunological competence to the individual (patient)...[15]
We're sure that scientists will be rushing to implement that as soon as they figure out what the hell it means.
Other conflicts have produced distinctive illnesses, such as "shell shock" after World War One, and the high incidence of PTSD after the Vietnam War.[2]