New Burn Pit Exposure Training and Clinical Toolbox Available for Military Health System Healthcare Providers

Image of U.S. Army Sgt. Robert B. Brown with Regimental Combat Team 6, Combat Camera Unit, takes a photograph of firefighters at the Fallujah, Iraq. U.S. Army Sgt. Robert B. Brown with Regimental Combat Team 6, Combat Camera Unit, takes a photograph of firefighters at the Fallujah, Iraq, burn pit as smoke and flames rise into the night sky on May 25, 2007. The Department of Defense and Department of Veterans Affairs continue to support veterans exposed to toxins from open burn pits and are now offering updated training for healthcare providers.

The Department of Defense and the Department of Veterans Affairs continue to work closely together to address military-related toxic material/environmental exposures from the Iraq and Afghanistan wars through the VA’s 2014 Airborne Hazards and Open Burn Pit Registry. In June 2025, the Defense Health Agency added new training requirements for healthcare providers on toxic exposures and burn pits.

On Aug. 1, 2024, the VA launched a redesigned registry after extensive feedback showing veterans found it too challenging to enroll in the program. The new registry helps inform effort to improve benefits as part of the PACT Act of 2022, also known as the “Promise to Address Comprehensive Toxics Act.”

The VA and the DOD also expanded PACT Act benefits and VA health care for service members and veterans who served in Operation Desert Shield and Operation Desert Storm, as well as related operations in Iraq, the war on terrorism, and the Vietnam War.

Key updates to the registry include:

  • Automatic enrollment of more than 4.7 million veterans and service members who meet the expanded eligibility criteria based on DOD manpower and deployment records
  • Information from all military-exposure databases
  • Removal of a 144-question survey required to participate in the registry
  • Establishment of an easy opt-out process for enrollees

New Training Required

The new DHA training is for healthcare providers at all military hospitals and clinics. It’s called the “Airborne Hazards and Open Burn Pit Registry Overview.” The training is in accordance with the requirements of Section 725 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2022.

Under the guidance, healthcare providers must complete the one-hour Joint Knowledge Online training course if they have not already done so. It also requires providers to review the “Airborne Hazards and Open Burn Pit Registry DoD Health Care Provider Clinical Toolbox.”

Provider Training Updates

The updated training includes expanded information about:

For medical personnel seeking more information on deployment-related environmental exposures, continuing education-eligible training is offered by the VA’s War Related Illness and Injury Study Center.

The resource contains:

  • Background information on airborne hazards and the registry
  • Guidance for conducting a medical evaluation associated with environmental exposure concerns
  • Resources for providers to review and share with service members and other healthcare providers to improve health outcomes for those exposed

Educational materials regarding military exposures are regularly updated, so providers should plan to check in for any changes in guidance.

Related Illnesses

In addition to burn pits, oil well fires, smoke, sand, dust, the mixture of solid particles and liquid droplets suspended in the air (particulate matter), and regional pollution from the climate and environment, the VA links nine infectious diseases to military service in Southwest Asia. Additionally, veterans may have been exposed to depleted uranium from vehicles or being wounded by a fragment containing depleted uranium.

You also may be interested in...

Policy
Feb 6, 2004

Memorandum: #04-004, Department of Defense Deployment Biomonitoring Policy and Approved Bioassays for Depleted Uranium and Lead

.PDF | 788.60 KB

The Department has developed criteria for the approval of bioassays to support deployment operations (Attachment 2). Bioassays for Depleted Uranium and lead (Attachments 3 and 4) are approved for use at this time to assess human exposures during or after deployment and combat operations.

  • Identification #: 04-004
  • Type: Memorandum
Report
Feb 1, 1996

Presidential Advisory Committee on Gulf War Veterans Illnesses Interim Report

.PDF | 6.30 MB

President Clinton established the Presidential Advisory Committee on Gulf War Veterans’ Illnesses to ensure an independent, open, and comprehensive examination of health concerns related to Gulf War service. This interim report includes four chapters addressing specific elements of the Committee’s charter: outreach, medical and clinical issues, ...

Publication
Jan 1, 1996

Evaluation of the US DOD Persian Gulf CCEP

In July 1994, the U.S. Department of Defense asked the Institute of Medicine to establish a committee to evaluate the Comprehensive Clinical Evaluation Program. This report identifies the major issues the committee has identified since the first meeting in October 1994

Fact Sheet
Feb 1, 1995

The Persian Gulf Veterans Coordinating Board

.PDF | 36.51 KB

An interagency board - the Persian Gulf Veterans Coordinating Board - was established in January 1994 to work to resolve the health concerns of Persian Gulf veterans, including active duty personnel and reservists with Gulf service.

Refine your search