Sailors ill three years after sub fire

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  • u-5075
    Junior Member
    • Feb 2003
    • 1134

    #1

    Sailors ill three years after sub fire

    Sailors ill three years after sub fire

    By MURRAY BREWSTER The Canadian Press | EXCLUSIVE
    Mon. Mar 10 - 6:44 PM
    Read the latest news and headlines out of Nova Scotia. Keep up with the stories and local news that matter to you.


    Three-and-a-half years after a fatal submarine fire, surviving crew
    members of HMCS Chicoutimi are falling ill with debilitating conditions —
    severe enough to force some of them out of the navy.
    And researchers, who only recently analyzed the noxious substances in the
    smoke that crew members inhaled during the electrical fire, have yet to
    determine the impact on long-term health.
    Many of the men and their families have battled bureaucrats over pension
    entitlements. And at one or time or another, they've had documented
    compensation claims rejected.
    ``I know a lot of guys, their health is getting worse,'' said Denis
    Lafleur, a former petty officer, who was among the most severely injured.

    ``Nobody has been willing to come forward and admit what was burned on
    the boat.''
    Almost half of the 56 men who battled to save their boat from a raging
    electrical fire in stormy seas off Ireland in October 2004 have been
    discharged from the service, will soon leave the military, or are on the
    medically disabled list.
    ``It's hard to look in the mirror,'' said one sailor, who was among more
    than a half-dozen who agreed to lengthy interviews with The Canadian
    Press.
    ``I am a walking shell of what I once was. I was at the peak of my
    fitness before the fire. I was the healthiest I had been in my whole life
    and now I am half the person I was.''
    Sailors still serving spoke on the condition their names not be used.
    Part of their reluctance stems from not only fear of retribution but from
    the stigma attached to them by fellow submariners who didn't experience
    the fire.
    At times, they say, their persistent health complaints have labelled them
    as ``sick bay rangers.''
    The handful of survivors who agreed to come forward brought with them
    health documentation and letters to back up their claims.
    Many of the crew have been diagnosed with post-traumatic stress. Some
    have developed severe breathing difficulties, preventing them from
    climbing a flight of stairs.
    Some sailors have had fainting spells, short-term memory loss. Others
    have developed chronic conditions, such as asthma.
    There are neurological disorders. Crew members spoke of a colleague with
    epilepsy. Another had brain surgery.
    All of those interviewed blame their illnesses on exposure to the noxious
    smoke and grey soot left over from the fire, which crippled the used
    British submarine during its maiden voyage to Canada.
    Laboratory tests to recreate the thick, black smoke took place just last
    fall and the chemical analysis only recently landed on the desk of the
    navy's lead toxicologist, Dr. Stephen Tserkrekos.
    ``It's been a frustration for me that the process has taken as long as it
    has, but I'm sort of stuck with the situation the way that it is,'' said
    Tserkrekos.
    Because of the complexity of the tests, the military was forced to rely
    on the National Research Council, and had to ``get into the queue'' with
    other government departments.
    Tserkrekos says it could take until the fall to estimate what impact the
    cocktail of chemicals had on the sailors.
    Of particular concern to the crew is Peridite, an epoxy and known
    carcinogen used to glue insulation to the deck and hull.
    But Cmdr. Jeff Agnew says ``as far as we determine'' the substance, which
    submarine-maker BAE Systems Inc. warned requires special handling if
    burned, was not part of the fire.
    Since the tragedy, which claimed the life of 32-year-old Lieut. Chris
    Saunders, the Canadian military and the public's attention has been
    firmly fixed on the deaths in Afghanistan.
    ``For all of us guys who were injured on Chicoutimi in the line of duty,
    it seems like we've been forgotten,'' said a second sailor, who also
    asked for anonymity.
    A veteran's advocate agreed.
    ``There's so much competition for money and resources within the federal
    government, (that) trying to understand how a myriad of different
    chemicals interact with the human body on the battlefield — or in a
    submarine — is low on the totem pole in terms of priorities,'' said Sean
    Bruyea, who spent 14 years as an air force intelligence officer.
    By failing to track the men as a group, documenting their health concerns
    outside individual medical records, the navy is setting up Chicoutimi
    survivors for the same bureaucratic nightmare experienced by soldiers
    exposed to Agent Orange testing in the 1960s, Bruyea said.
    Many of the men spent five days living in soot as the powerless warship
    was towed to safety.
    ``You take a bite of a sandwich and the bread was black. There were
    flakes of it floating in your drink,'' said a third crewman.
    It permeated everything, including equipment, clothes and dishes that had
    been sealed away in cupboards.
    ``We joked about who was going to play us in the movie. We joked about
    how we were killing ourselves by eating.''
    Every time someone moved or the boat lurched in the turbulent seas, soot
    would be thrown into the air and sailors would start coughing.
    ``I remember that acidic taste, kind of like needles on your tongue,''
    said a fourth sailor. ``The Chicoutimi still smells of the fire (today);
    the burnt carbon, chemical kind of smell that you get.''
    On their return to Halifax, the crew was told the soot had been analyzed
    and it presented no long-term threat to their health.
    But Tserkrekos says that study was meant to assess whether the boat was
    safe for the temporary crew that eventually brought it to Halifax — men
    who faced limited exposure. It did not take into consideration the health
    risks someone would face living in ashes over a five-day period, a subtle
    but important distinction.
    ``I still think to this day that whatever was in the soot (got) into my
    blood,'' said one sailor.
    Another sailor kept his ash-encrusted coffee mug, an unwashed sweater and
    a pill-bottle-size vial of the soot, which he's considered having
    analyzed by an independent lab.
    ``Maybe one day, if something happens to me, maybe there'll be enough
    stuff there my wife can take it somewhere and find something out,'' he
    said.
    Tserkrekos says the soot and smoke reports will now be combined to
    produce an updated, comprehensive health analysis.
    The navy chose not to track the health of the crew as a whole beyond the
    first anniversary of the accident, in October 2005.
    Most sailors were told to rely on their individual doctors, while those
    who failed certain medical tests were kept under watch.
    But the absence of a body of evidence has made it tough for individuals,
    especially those starting to get sick, to argue their claims before
    Veterans Affairs bureaucrats.
    Cmdr. Rob Briggs, a physician and senior fleet surgeon, said there are a
    lot of variables that go into care. But the rule of thumb is the higher
    the exposure to toxins and quicker a person gets sick, the more likely it
    is they'll face long-term health issues.
    ``So the folks that showed up within a year of symptoms were the folks
    we'd expect to be most sensitive to the exposure they received and these
    folks are being followed up adequately,'' he said.
    Because of the shortage of physicians and frequent transfers, some
    sailors say they've seen several different doctors since the fire.
    ``I honestly feel like I'm a piece of garbage that's just been thrown
    out,'' said one sailor.
    ``As soon as I got hurt, I felt like a second-class citizen. I was no use
    to them any more.''
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