Veterans may be eligible for disability compensation and health care benefits for any disease that VA recognizes as related to radiation exposure during service. Surviving spouses, dependent children and dependent parents of Veterans who died as the result of diseases related to radiation exposure during service may be eligible for survivors’ benefits.
Presumptive diseases related to ionizing radiation

For Veterans who participated in a radiation-risk activity during service (including “Atomic Veterans”), VA assumes that certain cancers are related to their exposure. These are called “presumptive diseases.”
Cancers of the bile ducts, bone, brain, breast, colon, esophagus, gall bladder, liver (primary site, but not if cirrhosis or hepatitis B is indicated), lung (including bronchiolo-alveolar cancer), pancreas, pharynx, ovary, salivary gland, small intestine, stomach, thyroid, urinary tract (kidney/renal, pelvis, urinary bladder, and urethra)
Leukemia (except chronic lymphocytic leukemia)
Lymphomas (except Hodgkin’s disease)
Multiple myeloma (cancer of plasma cells)
These Veterans don’t have to prove a connection between these diseases and their service to be eligible for disability compensation.
Surviving spouses, dependent children and dependent parents of Veterans who participated in a radiation-risk activity and died as the result of one of these diseases may be eligible for survivors’ benefits.
Other diseases associated with radiation exposure
If a Veteran who was exposed to radiation during military service (including “Atomic Veterans”) develops one of the diseases listed below and meets other requirements, disability compensation may be provided on a case-by-case basis.
All cancers
Non-malignant thyroid nodular disease
Parathyroid adenoma
Posterior subcapsular cataracts
Tumors of the brain and central nervous system
Eligibility depends on how much radiation the Veteran received and other factors, such as the period of time between exposure to radiation and the development of the disease.
Surviving spouses, dependent children and dependent parents of Veterans who were exposed to radiation during military service and died as the result of one of these diseases may be eligible for survivors’ benefits.
VA also will consider the possibility that other diseases not listed above were caused by radiation, if supported by medical or scientific evidence. To be eligible for compensation, VA must be able to establish that it is at least as likely as not that a Veteran’s disease was caused by his/her radiation exposure during service.
Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS)
VA presumes amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) diagnosed in all Veterans who had 90 days or more continuous active military service is related to their service, although ALS is not related to radiation exposure.
Source; http://www.publichealth.va.gov/exposures/radiation/diseases.asp
Veterans Compensated For Exposure To And Death By Radiation; How About Everyone Else? via @AGreenRoad
But not everyone has been compensated. Kevin Blanch talks about how many veterans never got a dime, despite turning in all of their paperwork and being at ground zero for the atomic bomb above ground tests.
Listen to Kevin’s story about his Dad, who was drafted and then used as an unwilling guinea pig in a radiation experiment, like 100,000 other US servicemen. According to Kevin, all of these guys died of radiation related diseases. But who drew the line saying this guy died of the fallout, and these civilians did not?
What happens to the millions of civilians who were also exposed to radioactive fallout from thousands of nuclear bomb tests and then got sick or died from the radiation? The government says it is not responsible. The military says it is not in their domain. Everyone has washed their hands of this horrible coverup of mass genocide of the US military against it’s own soldiers and civilian population. It seems that no one wants to touch this issue, or anything to do with nuclear accident casualties, with a ten thousand foot long pole.
And if by some chance, this information helps you or your loved one get a settlement, please consider making a generous donation to the source of this helpful information (AGR). And spread this link around, to any veteran that may desperately need it.
Veterans Compensated For Exposure To And Death By Radiation; How About Everyone Else? via @AGreenRoad