I've attached the abstract from the webiste below this article.
The full version cannot be accessed without a password
If anyone can send us the PDF version, I would be happy to
reposte it to others. Vern
Subject: [vnnews-l] Agent Orange: New Geographic Information System Tracks Military Herbicides
sent to vnnews-l by Stephen Denney sdenney@OCF.Berkeley.EDU
Copyright 2003 AScribe Inc.
AScribe Newswire
March 18, 2003 Tuesday 9:16 AM Eastern Time
LENGTH: 644 words
HEADLINE: New Geographic Information System Tracks Military Herbicides
Used in Vietnam; System Studies Health Effects of Agent
Orange 30 Years After Use by Modeling Military and Civilian
Populations, Environmental Exposures
BODY:
NEW YORK, March 19 [AScribe Newswire] -- Between 1961 and 1971 U.S.
military forces dispersed over 19 million gallons of herbicidal
agents, including over 12 million gallons of Agent Orange, in the
Republic of Vietnam. Millions of Vietnamese and a large number of the
3.2 million American men and women who served in the armed forces in
Vietnam in areas defoliated by herbicides such as Agent Orange were
exposed, but the health effects still are not fully known. Now, under
contract to the National Academy of Sciences, researchers at Columbia
University's Mailman School of Public Health have developed a
geographic information system [GIS] to estimate these exposures by
analyzing the relationships between herbicide spraying, geography,
population, and troop location. Researchers now have a tool to pursue
epidemiologic and environmental studies of exposed individuals,
military units, and other entities whose health might be affected by
spraying activities.
Co-lead investigators of the study Jeanne M. Stellman, professor of
clinical health policy and management, and Steven D. Stellman,
professor of clinical epidemiology, both at the Mailman School,
developed the powerful GIS tool that will allow researchers to
generate a quantitative measure and, therefore, estimate and assign
herbicide exposure opportunity scores to troops, locations, and
individuals -- critical tools for epidemiologic investigations of
health outcomes.
What this means for individuals is that now both Vietnam veterans and
residents can determine their proximity to herbicide sprays.
With its unique user-friendly software package, called the Vietnam
Herbicide Exposure Assessment System at the Mailman School, the
relational GIS database system provides the ability to do otherwise
complex exposure model calculations with rapid, straightforward
arithmetic procedures. According to Dr. Jeanne Stellman, "In the case
of exposure to herbicides in Vietnam -- which began 40 years ago and
ended 30 years ago -- no other reliable measure is available for large
scale epidemiologic studies. While Vietnam was not uniformly sprayed,
patterns we see are sufficient to justify these studies on military
and civilian populations as well as studies of environmental and
ecologic damage." Dr. Steven Stellman observes, "Lack of data and
exposure models no longer need to be the major impediments they have
been in the past to research the health of Vietnam veterans and the
Vietnamese, Cambodian and Laotian people."
The complete findings of the study will be published in the March
issue of Environmental Health Perspectives and summarized in the
Environews Section.
You can access the abstract online at http://ehponline.org/orange2003/
or at http://dx.doi.org/ via doi: 10.1289/ehp.5755 .
The National Academy of Sciences, as contractors of the research, will
be issuing a report to the Veterans Administration in late March 2003
with recommendations for next steps and continuing epidemiologic
research on the effects of Agent Orange.
About the Mailman School of Public Health
The only accredited school of public health in New York City, and
among the first in the nation, Columbia University's Mailman School of
Public Health provides instruction and research opportunities to more
than 800 graduate students in pursuit of masters and doctoral degrees.
Its students and over 200 multi-disciplinary faculty engage in
research and service in the city, nation, and around the world,
concentrating on biostatistics, environmental health sciences,
epidemiology, health policy and management, population and family
health, and sociomedical sciences.
About EHP
EHP is the journal of the National Institute of Environmental Health
Sciences, part of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
More information is available online at http://www.ehponline.org/.
CONTACT:
Stephanie Berger, 212-305-4372, 212-305-5635;
sb2247@columbia.edu
A Geographic Information System for Characterizing Exposure
to Agent Orange and Other Herbicides in Vietnam
Jeanne Mager Stellman,1 Steven D. Stellman,2,3 Tracy Weber,1
Carrie Tomasallo,1 Andrew B. Stellman,4 and Richard
Christian, Jr.5
1Department of Health Policy and Management and 2Department
of Epidemiology, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia
University, New York, New York, USA; 3Institute for Cancer
Prevention, Valhalla, New York, USA; 4Foundation for Worker,
Veteran, and Environmental Health, Inc., Brooklyn, NY, USA;
5Lt. Col. U.S. Army (retired) and former Director U.S. Army
and Joint Services Environmental Support Group, Washington
DC, USA
Abstract
Between 1961 and 1971, U.S. military forces dispersed more
than 19 million gallons of phenoxy and other herbicidal
agents in the Republic of Vietnam, including more than 12
million gallons of dioxin-contaminated Agent Orange, yet
only comparatively limited epidemiologic and environmental
research has been carried out on the distribution and health
effects of this contamination. As part of a response to a
National Academy of Sciences' request for development of
exposure methodologies for carrying out epidemiologic
research, a conceptual framework for estimating exposure
opportunity to herbicides and a geographic information
system (GIS) have been developed. The GIS is based on a
relational database system that integrates extensive data
resources on dispersal of herbicides (e.g., HERBS records of
Ranch Hand aircraft flight paths, gallonage, and chemical
agent), locations of military units and bases, dynamic
movement of combat troops in Vietnam, and locations of
civilian population centers. The GIS can provide a variety
of proximity counts for exposure to 9,141 herbicide
application missions. In addition, the GIS can be used to
generate a quantitative exposure opportunity index that
accounts for quantity of herbicide sprayed, distance, and
environmental decay of a toxic factor such as dioxin, and is
flexible enough to permit substitution of other mathematical
exposure models by the user. The GIS thus provides a basis
for estimation of herbicide exposure for use in large-scale
epidemiologic studies. To facilitate widespread use of the
GIS, a user-friendly software package was developed to
permit researchers to assign exposure opportunity indexes to
troops, locations, or individuals. Key words: Agent Orange,
cacodylic acid, defoliants, 2,4-dichlorophenoxy acetic acid,
exposure opportunity, geographic information system, GIS,
herbicides, military, picloram, 2,4,5-trichlorophenoxy
acetic acid, Vietnam. Environ Health Perspect 111:321-328
(2003). doi:10.1289/ehp.5755 available via
http://dx.doi.org/ [Online 1 November 2002]
Address correspondence to S.D. Stellman, Department of
Epidemiology, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia
University, 630 West 168th Street - PH-18, New York, NY
10032 USA. Telephone: (212) 305-4911. Fax: (212) 305-9413.
E-mail: sds91@columbia.edu
We gratefully acknowledge the efforts of D. Hakenson and the
U.S. Armed Services Center for Research of Unit Records in
development of many of the data resources, F. Benjamin for
her assistance with military records, and N. Heim for
illustrations. J.M.S. and S.D.S. contributed equally to the
manuscript.
This work was supported by the National Academy of Sciences
(subcontract NAS-VA-5124-98-001) and by U.S. Public Health
Service grants CA-17613 and CA-68384.
Received 6 May 2002; accepted 26 July 2002.
Last Updated: February 19, 2002