To date, little conclusive evidence has been found to link many hypothesized possible causal agents--including depleted uranium, oil well fire smoke, and stress--to Gulf War illnesses.[2] Among the agents still being investigated are pyridostigmine bromide (PB) pills and pesticides. PB pills were given to personnel in ODS/DS to protect against the nerve agent soman. Overexposure to pesticides can cause symptoms similar to those reported by some Gulf War veterans, but little is known about the use (or misuse) of pesticides by the general in-theater military population during ODS/DS.
Before this survey, logistical information quantifying the amount of military-issue pesticides ordered from the theater of operations and interviews with military preventive medicine personnel and entomologists provided the best available data on pesticides used in ODS/DS. However, that information failed to account for pesticides acquired on the local market in theater, or those used by local contractors hired to apply them. It also fails to account for personal-use pesticides shipped from home to individual soldiers, or pesticides acquired from allied troops.
This survey was commissioned to quantify pesticide use by the average soldier during the Gulf War: Which pesticides were used, who used them, and in what quantities. The purpose of the survey was to augment available information about the extent of pesticide use by the troops, the level of multiple pesticide use, and the duration and frequency of use. We designed the survey to elicit data from veterans about their personal use of pesticides and use they observed by others. The survey was a telephone interview of just over 2,000 veterans, randomly selected to be statistically representative of the entire Gulf War population on the ground in the Kuwaiti theater of operations (KTO). This population--referred to in this report as the in-theater Gulf War population--consists of:
Enormous effort was involved in moving, housing, feeding, and caring for this many people. For example, by January 1991, the Army was providing almost 40 million meals per month to feed military personnel in theater. It has been estimated that during the early part of the Desert Shield buildup, 4,000 U.S. soldiers arrived in Saudi Arabia each day (Scales, 1997). Such a rapid force buildup required the equally rapid deployment of a logistical infrastructure to acquire and distribute everything from food, water, and fuel, to ammunition and repair parts, to tents and other living accommodations. Part of that effort involved controlling vermin and insect pests indigenous to the region and pests that were attracted by the influx of a large, temporary military population.
Living conditions in KTO varied greatly. The most basic accommodations were tents and rudimentary shelters typically used by the front-line combat troops; variations with increasing comfort were tent cities with additional amenities, air-conditioned tents with floors, and more urban quarters in Saudi Arabian cities. Similarly, eating, working, and sanitary facilities varied greatly (Schubert and Kraus, 1995).
Insects and rodents were of particular concern during ODS/DS as potential disease vectors. Pest management in ODS/DS was focused primarily on ground troops.[4] As we mentioned, with roughly one-half million personnel deployed to the region in a very short span of time, under widely varying living, working, and threat conditions, the logistical challenge was large.
During the course of ODS/DS, the military procured and used various pesticides. The authority on pesticides in the U.S. military is the Armed Forces Pest Management Board (AFPMB), which recommends pesticides and pesticide policies for all the services. All military-issue pesticides available during ODS/DS were approved by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). However, it is possible that pesticides other than those recommended by the AFPMB may have been used, since the only pesticides that are considered "unauthorized" are those not approved for use by the EPA (unless otherwise specifically approved by the military). For example, soldiers often supplement military-issue pesticides with commercial products.
Pests of concern in theater and the vicinity included arthropods such as sand flies, "filth flies," black flies, mosquitoes, cockroaches, lice, ticks, scorpions, spiders, and centipedes. These vermin can transmit major diseases such as viral encephalitis, sand fly fever, and leishmaniasis, and can become an extreme nuisance because of their overabundance.[5] Rodents such as rats, mice, and voles were also of concern as disease vectors and contaminants of food supplies. Table 1.1 lists the pesticides used or potentially used by military units during ODS/DS.
More than 35 types of pesticides and pesticide products were used by military personnel during ODS/DS. None was unique to the military--all are, or were at the time, legally available for civilian use in the United States and other countries. The actual total usage of pesticides by U.S. forces during ODS/DS is unknown, but estimates for pesticides acquired within the military supply system have been made by calculating the amount ordered minus the amount returned. Estimates do not include any pesticides in the possession of units at the outset of ODS/DS or pesticides acquired outside the military supply system. Thus, they do not include any pesticides acquired from the local economy or obtained by individual soldiers on their own. For example, there is anecdotal information that some troops obtained such products as citronella candles from private sources to combat pests. In addition, some units that received pesticides did not use them or shipped them home with their unit (rather than returning them to the supply system). There were also reports of pesticides being left in theater or given to coalition partners.
OSAGWI interviews with Gulf War veterans indicate that other pesticides not listed in Table 1.1 were used by or near U.S. forces during ODS/DS. Personnel with pest control responsibilities, as well as supply and logistics personnel, obtained some insecticide from the local economy in Saudi Arabia, and local firms provided pest control contract services. The extent to which other pesticides were used and the amounts used by specific units could not be determined from existing information.
Active Ingredient Product | Synonyms, Trade Names | Target Pests |
Allethrin | d-trans-Allethrin | Insects |
Aluminum phosphide | Phostoxin, Fumitoxin, AlP | Stored product pests |
Azamethiphos | Snip Flykiller, Alfacron | Flies |
Bacillus thurengiensis | Teknar | Mosquito larvae |
Bendiocarb | Ficam W | Roaches, fleas, ticks, mosquitoes, other arthropods |
Boric acid | Whitmire (PT 240) Perma-dust | Insects |
Brodifacoum | Talon G | Rodents |
Bromadiolone | Maki | Rodents |
Carbaryl | Sevin | Ants, fleas, other insects |
Chlorophacinone | Rozol | Rodents |
Chlorpyrifos | Dursban | Mosquitoes, other insects, ticks, mites |
Cypermethrin | Demon | Insects |
Deltamethrin | Insects | |
Diazinon | Insects | |
Dichlorvos | DDVP | Insects |
Diethyl-m-toluamide | DEET, 3M Insect/Arthropod and Cutter Insect Repellents | Sand flies, other insects, ticks |
Diphacinone | P.C.Q., Rodent Cake, Di-Blox | Rodents |
Ethyl hexanediol | Insects | |
Hydramethylnon (ANSI) | Combat, MaxForce | Insects |
Lindane | Lice | |
Malathion | Insects | |
Methomyl | Flytek | Flies |
Pentachlorophenol | Fungi | |
Permethrin | Permanone | Insects |
Pet flea and tick collars | Amitraz, carbaryl, chlorpyrifos, methoprene, permethrin, phosmet, propoxur, tetrachorvinphos | Insects and ticks |
d-phenothrin | Insects | |
Pindone | Pival | Rodents |
Propoxur | Baygon | Flies, roaches, other insects |
Pyrethrum/pyrethrins | Pyrenone | Mosquitoes, flies |
Resmethrin | Insects | |
Sulfur | Chigg-Away | Chiggers (mites) |
Valone | Tracking powder | Rodents |
Warfarin | O-R-500, Rodex, Final, Erase | Rodents |
SOURCE: Modified from the Office of the Special Assistant for Gulf War Illnesses (OSAGWI).
[1]http://www.va.gov/health/environ/faq.htm.
[2]See, for example, Harley et al. (1999); Spektor (1998); and, Marshall et al. (1999).
[3]AFPMB (1996).
[4]Indigenous pests were not considered a significant threat to personnel remaining on naval vessels. It was expected that their exposure was no different than if the personnel had been at sea in any other part of the world; therefore, no special studies of that group were performed.
[5]AFPMB (1996).