The Buried IED…Here at Home

A Marine flees an IED blast that killed two comrades in Afghanistan / Manpreett Romana/AFP/Getty Images)
A US Marine of 2nd Marine Expeditionary Brigade runs to safety moments after an IED blast in Garmsir district of Helmand Province in Afghanistan on July 13, 2009. Two US Marine soldiers were killed when the explosion occured as they tried to clear a route into the Taliban heartland of southern Helmand province. About 4,000 US Marines are battling insurgents in a massive offensive launched in the south early this month to clear Taliban militants out of strongholds ahead of presidential and provincial council elections scheduled for August 20. AFP PHOTO/Manpreet ROMANA (Photo credit should read MANPREET ROMANA/AFP/Getty Images)

The military’s fight against improvised explosive devices along roads in Afghanistan and Iraq — which have killed more than 3,000 Americans — has cost more than $20 billion. But that’s only the money spent by the Pentagon’s Joint Improvised Explosive Device Defeat Organization (JIEDDO, pronounced ji-dough) to stop them over there. The costs at home are C.O.D. –  yet to be paid — as Sharon Weinberger writes in the latest issue of Nature:

…an increasing body of evidence suggests that the repeated concussions have left [troops] with an invisible, subcellular-level form of traumatic brain injury (TBI) that not only impairs their day-to-day functioning, but also increases their long-term risk of developing neurodegenerative diseases. “We’ve got a lot of guys out there that might be 30 years old that have been blown up a dozen times,” says Kevin Kit Parker, a biomedical engineer at Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts, who is conducting research on TBI. “And the risk that these guys are going to get a disease like Alzheimer’s or Parkinson’s is soaring.”

Read the full thing here. And weep.

Related Topics: IEDs, Afghanistan, Iraq, Military, Military Health, Military Mental Health, National Security, Pentagon, PTSD, Traumatic Brain Injury, Troops, Veterans, Weapons
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