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USDA-DOD
Research Initiative to Protect U.S. Military
By Rosalie Marion
Bliss
April 23, 2004 WASHINGTON, April 23, 2004--The
U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) and
the U.S. Department of Defense (DOD)
today announced a $15-million, 5-year research program designed to develop new
technologies to protect U.S. soldiers.
The initiative, the Deployed War Fighter Protection Research Program, will
fund research programs at the Agricultural Research Service, USDA's chief
in-house scientific research agency, to develop novel methods to protect U.S.
armed forces from insects that spread dangerous diseases. Historically, more
troops sent into battle are taken out of action by insect-borne diseases than
are injured in combat, according to DOD.
The ARS
National
Program for Veterinary, Medical and Urban Entomology guides the agency's
research on the prevention of human and animal diseases carried by arthropods,
such as insects and ticks. Arthropod-borne diseases, which include malaria,
dengue and West Nile fever, are among the most deadly in the world and are
especially difficult to control during military operations.
"This program represents the largest monetary commitment provided by
DOD to ARS in the past 50 years," said ARS Acting Administrator Edward B.
Knipling. "The program is designed to encourage the rapid development of
products that control vector-borne diseases, and for USDA to continue using its
expertise to support military preventive medicine."
DOD's Armed Forces Pest Management Board (AFPMB), located in Silver Spring, Md., will
oversee the research program. An internal steering committee of ARS national
program leaders will allocate the funds among several specialized laboratories
within the agency, where ARS scientists work to develop innovative pest-control
methods.
DOD is providing funds to ARS to further the relationship between the two
departments, according to Navy Captain Gary Breeden, executive director of the
AFPMB. "Since the 1940s, ARS scientists working with the U.S. military
have made some of the world's most important advances," he said.
"Every breakthrough product in use today that was created to control
disease-carrying insects was developed as a result of the relationship between
USDA and the AFPMB. These products protect the military and save millions of
lives every year around the world."
ARS scientists pioneered the method of treating military uniforms and bed
nets with insecticides that repel and kill disease-carrying mosquitoes. Such
commercially available mosquito nets have become the most common and effective
malaria-preventive method used in the world today.
ARS scientists supported by DOD recently patented a compound that is now
being tested as the key ingredient in a new generation of safe insect
repellents. Named SS220, it could surpass DEET, a commonly used repellent
developed by ARS for the military 50 years ago. Today, DEET continues to be the
most widely used insect repellent in the world, available in a number of
consumer products that come in varying concentrations and forms, including
gels, aerosol and pump sprays, sticks and lotions.
"The goal of both departments is to enable ARS to continue its research
to control vector-borne diseases that pose a risk to U.S. military troops in
the field," said Knipling.
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