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Old 05-15-2008, 08:54 AM
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Gimpy Gimpy is offline
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Default Report: Va Now Accepting Claims For Hypertension Linked To Agent Orange Exposure

REPORT: VA NOW ACCEPTING CLAIMS FOR HYPERTENSION LINKED TO AGENT ORANGE EXPOSURE -- Will determine service-connected status at a later date, but claims are expected to be approved.

Suggestion: If you are a Vietnam veteran with hypertension, file a claim for the condition as a presumptive. Even though the VA is not processing these claims at this time, if they give the go-ahead, you'll already be in line.

###START###


VA begins taking claims related to Agent Orange exposure

By Chris Roberts

El Paso Times



Veterans Affairs has started taking claims for hypertension related to Agent Orange exposure, but it will determine at a later date whether the claims will be honored as being military "service-related," according to service organizations who received notices from VA.


A letter from the Texas Veterans Commission to its county service officers indicates that the claims are expected to be approved.
The claims won't be actively "worked" until the VA makes its decision.


Requests for comment made to local VA agencies were referred to Washington, D.C.

However, after two days, the public affairs office in Washington, D.C., still had no comment.

If the claims are approved, it could mean as much as $300 a month for Bob Snow, a retired soldier who worked as a forward observer directing artillery fire in the Vietnamese jungles.

Snow - who worked with special forces soldiers and Montagnards, a French name for the indigenous people of Vietnam's central highlands - operated in areas sprayed with Agent Orange, a defoliant that knocked down vegetation used as cover by the enemy.

Snow retired in 1982 and was diagnosed with hypertension by the VA in 1983.

However, the condition was not considered service related and therefore his disability compensation was limited.

If hypertension is connected to Agent Orange claims, it could mean as much as an extra $300 per month for Snow, which he said will relieve some of the pressure of the rising cost of living.

Jeri Elena Mark worked as a radar mechanic for Hawk missile systems at a base in Vietnam where she watched planes drop Agent Orange on vegetation surrounding the camp, which was being shelled.

She had experienced high blood pressure, a symptom of hypertension, during her Army career, usually associated with flashbacks from her Vietnam service.

She retired in 1985, but her exposure is not considered combat-related, so she would get no increase in disability payments.

However, her family would receive benefits after her death if the cause is related to hypertension.


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