VA Rejects Auto-Linking Fine Particles to Vets' Blood Diseases
Published Date: 11/20/2025
Notice
Summary
The VA decided that certain blood diseases like polycythemia vera and others won’t be automatically linked to exposure to tiny air pollution particles (PM2.5) for veterans who served in specific Middle East and Africa regions since 1990 or 2001. This means veterans with these conditions won’t get automatic benefits based on this exposure. The decision is final and affects how claims are handled, but it doesn’t change current benefits or costs immediately.
Analyzed Economic Effects
2 provisions identified: 1 benefits, 1 costs, 0 mixed.
No Automatic VA Presumption for Blood Diseases
The VA decided it will not establish an automatic presumption of service connection for polycythemia vera, essential thrombocythemia, histiocytosis, mastocytosis, or chronic myeloproliferative disease for veterans exposed to fine particulate matter (PM2.5) while serving in the Southwest Asia Theater or Somalia on or after August 2, 1990, or in Afghanistan, Egypt, Jordan, Lebanon, Syria, Yemen, Djibouti, or Uzbekistan on or after September 11, 2001. That means veterans with those conditions will not receive automatic benefits based solely on PM2.5 exposure under this decision.
Individual Claims and Existing Rights Preserved
The VA says this decision does not stop it from granting service connection for any of these diseases in an individual case if the evidence supports it. The notice also does not change any existing rights or procedures for veterans who already have benefits.
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