Posted on Oct 14, 2020
Does the Navy or Army give waivers for service connected PTSD?
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Hello to all. I’m wanting to get back Into the Navy, or Army. I’ve been out for 6 years and am trying to sift through the bull and the truth. Does theses branches off a waiver for PTSD? I have a PTSD rating of 50%. I understand I cannot receive VA payments and serve at the same time. I’ve been free of symptoms and have not taken any medication since 2015.
Posted 4 y ago
Responses: 4
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LTC Jason Mackay
PO3 Jed Choate - the VA rating doesn't have anything to do with it, its the history of it, and if it was part of your first separation, then it will Be up hill for a waiver.
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Even if you got your percentage reduced it would be a documented history of PTSD. Especially when it was 50% it will be a hard sale. I don't recommend going that route either. It was diagnosed for a reason and I think any gain from it being reduced would be short lived.
My suggestion would be to find other ways to serve. Civil Air Patrol and State Defense Forces are decent options. You could even go the first responder route if you want the camaraderie and a full time job. DOD has pretty strict standards when it comes to mental health for obvious reasons. I would look at other alternatives to serve.
My suggestion would be to find other ways to serve. Civil Air Patrol and State Defense Forces are decent options. You could even go the first responder route if you want the camaraderie and a full time job. DOD has pretty strict standards when it comes to mental health for obvious reasons. I would look at other alternatives to serve.
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PO1 Peggy Weldon Perales
Team Rubicon (teamrubiconusa.org) is an outstanding volunteer organization built by veterans for veterans to continue serving our country and communities after we take off the uniform. Outstanding support and kickass projects. Highly recommend checking it out.
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Any medical fitness issue is in AR40-501 (all branches use this standard) and DoDI 6130.03. With any mental health issue in an applicant, it will have a tie to DSM 5 which is a civilian mental health manual for clinicians to diagnose and classify mental health issues. It gets complicated.
Ensure you look at the correct chapter in 40-501, initial entry differs from retention standards, still more stringent are qualifications for flight billets and personnel that must enter a personal reliability program.
AR40-501 para 2-27k answers your question.
If you think that you have sufficient medical documentation to prove you have resolved this issue, go see a recruiter. MEPS will run the traps and if it is waivable, they'll advise the recruiter of that.
Because something is waivable, does not mean you get it or are offered it. The number of waivers is finite, especially if they get enough applicants that require no waivers.
Ensure you look at the correct chapter in 40-501, initial entry differs from retention standards, still more stringent are qualifications for flight billets and personnel that must enter a personal reliability program.
AR40-501 para 2-27k answers your question.
If you think that you have sufficient medical documentation to prove you have resolved this issue, go see a recruiter. MEPS will run the traps and if it is waivable, they'll advise the recruiter of that.
Because something is waivable, does not mean you get it or are offered it. The number of waivers is finite, especially if they get enough applicants that require no waivers.
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