Guest guest Posted July 25, 2006 Report Share Posted July 25, 2006 BRAVE JANET'S WIN IN GULF SYNDROME FIGHT by THOMAS SMITH, Sunday Mirror A FORMER Scots Army medic has become the first woman to prove that she is suffering from Gulf War Syndrome. Former staff sergeant Janet Ellice has won a historic five year battle against MoD chiefs, who have said the syndrome doesn't exist. The 48-year-old's life has been ruined after a string of illnesses plagued her following her service in the 1991 Gulf War. After being repeatedly told her poor health isn't inked to her military service, Janet has now received an army pension which recognises her illness. Relieved Janet, who lives with her husband in Dunoon, Argyll, said: " Words can't describe how happy I am - but I shouldn't have had to battle like this. " It was so difficult fighting to prove that I was suffering from Gulf War Syndrome when people say they don't believe you and that the condition doesn't even exist. " She is the third Gulf War veteran to successfully win an Army pension for the syndrome. Her landmark victory comes after ex-lifeguards-man and former medic Shaun Rusling won pensions for Gulf War Syndrome in cases highlighted by the Sunday Mirror. Now up to 7,000 more veterans are likely to demand that their illnesses are recognised too. Janet joined the Territorial Army in 1975 as a combat medical assistant, while working as a hospital laboratory assistant. In January 1991 she was sent on a two-week training camp in Chester as the first Gulf War loomed. She said: " We were pumped full of anti-nerve gas tablets. I remember being given around 12 different vaccinations in a 48-hour period to protect us against things like anthrax. " Almost immediately, Janet and many other TA soldiers were suffering neurological and bowel problems, chronic fatigue, crippling muscle pains and sleep and eating disorders. She still suffers today - more than 15 years later. Some days she is so ill she can't get out of bed and suffers memory loss, extreme mood swings and aggressive behaviour. " The symptoms worsened when we arrived in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, " she said. " I was there for two months. When I got home, the symptoms worsened. " Campaigners claim up to 9,000 veterans are suffering from Gulf War Syndrome. Gulf War Syndrome - never officially recognised by the MoD - is an umbrella term used to describe a range of illnesses suffered by veterans. When Janet went for an Army medical in London in 2001, she was told she was suffering similar symptoms to many other Gulf War veterans. She then applied for an Army war pension as she has been forced to retire from her hospital job due to ill health. Despite several appeals, the Army rejected her claim. Janet refused to give up and last month a Pensions' Appeal Tribunal in Edinburgh ruled that the " injury on which the claim was based, Gulf War Syndrome, was attributable to service " . She is now waiting to see how much pension she will receive. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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