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brokensoldier244th

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Posts posted by brokensoldier244th

  1. You're aren't 100%, and your state and county, even, can make their own rules about whether they accept TDIU the same as a 100% schedular rating. My state, for example, does not. If you aren't 100% schedular you don't get property tax exemptions, etc. You are not going to see 100% reflected when you log into the computer because you aren't rated 100%. They're isn't anything for the RO to correct. 

  2. I would leave out the references to your other family members, and to SSA. VA will already know that you are SSDI/SSA, its part of what we look up. The references to your family may be useful if they were discovery for court, but VA disability is about you, and only you. if it didn't happen to you or wasn't experienced by you, it didn't happen.  I would simplify your support statement down to the bare minimum of What you have for a service connection event and any treatment in service or complaint in service, something that shows you have a current disability now, and then briefly explain how you think they are related. Posting studies about things that you weren't directly involved with (like medical trials, for example) doesn't do much for you because the studies aren't about 'you', they are cross-section of other people. VA, for good or ill, is only concerned about you- its like the MST claims I work on- you may have a personal trauma event/PTSD or similar because of something you witnessed, but for MST specifically if you saw something happen to someone ELSE its not an MST based claim, because MST by definition has to be experienced by you.

     

    Bronco pretty much covered the rest. 

  3. Smc is a separate tier. Instead of “regular” tier you are paid at SMC tier, they aren’t stackable. Smc has nothing to do with caregiver. Housebound doesn’t mean being a vegetable or chained to your house. Remand means sent back to RO level to fix something. It’s in your decision letter. 

  4. Just write it off to the side, or type it as part of the contention name - DEET Exposure-PACT; toxic Substances disposal-PACT. 

    For “toxic disposal” you’ll  need to list at least something that was being disposed of, though, like chemical, or ordinance, or at least “particulate matter”. “Disposal of toxic substances” without saying what it was isn’t a claimable contention in an of itself. 
     

    We (VSR) are supposed to look at your dates and locations of service and liberally consider anything that might be PACT, but we still have to know what substance(s) you are claiming. We can look you up in a DOD database but that only lists potential exposures. You have to tell us what, in general. 
     

    What is your nexus for depression/etc and PACT? I’d claim the physical stuff (not under PACT- phys stuff, generally,  can’t be claimed under PACT) and the depression secondary to that, also. You can claim the same thing more than one way. I’m SC for back and related nerve pain w/ depression secondary to it, for example. 

  5. Anything you file as PACT is just your supposition that it might be. We still have to consider it on a direct basis as well. Even if you never left the States you can still fall under PACT due to TERA opinions (toxic exposure risk activities). TERA is basically anything that would show up on the hazardous in some way MSDN list as a civilian product. DEET shows up on the list under Gulf War veterans so it would also be folded into PACT. PACT isn't so much its own thing as it is an extension of what was already considered under GW but adding some locations and extending timeframes.  Youd be surprised what shows up under PACT- we run your name through a database from the DOD called ILER that cross-references your MOS, your various duty locations, and what substances you might have come into contact with. We then have to document the relative totality of your contact through your time in service. We can't just point to that time you were in Djibouti and stop- we have to list possibly significant proximal exposure wherever you were, domestic and abroad- it takes a few minutes, LOL. But, with that, if we can't point to a direct thing(s) that falls under PACT as presumptive we can still ask for an opinion about whatever contention you are claiming on the basis of overall exposure.

    Hypercholesterolemia or elevated serum (blood) cholesterol is not a disability for which VA compensation benefits are payable. Diagnoses of hyperlipidemia, elevated triglycerides, and elevated cholesterol are laboratory results and are not, in and of themselves, disabilities. 61 Fed. Reg. 20,440 (May 7, 1996). I don't write the laws that's just what they are. 

    The physical pain/spine issues shouldn't be too hard to service connect provided you can identify in-service event(s) that would plausibly represent the beginning of what you have now. If you had no complaints or treatment in service, nothing on your SEP exam, and you've never been treated for it until the last few years it's going to be more difficult, though. Some MOS's we can take pretty easily as causing those types of issues- if you were an 11B or have an ice cream cone with wings or something then yeah, you probably have back, knee, foot issues. If you were an intelligence guy in a bunker in the AF for 10 yrs, well, that's more of a challenge. 

     

  6. Ill have to keep my eyes open for that, then. I haven't come across any, but we get a lot of detritus from other offices sent to us. They are being told by their mid-level sups that if a claim has MST on it at all just boot it to us with no other development. What is supposed to happen is that they develop the non-MST contentions as much as they can THEN send to us. We then continue to follow/develop the non MST stuff, and the MST stuff because those claims, once here, stay here with us. It delays the claim a lot if there is nothing done to it because they saw MST on it and then we start on it from scratch. The system will also sometimes label a claim that way if it's not- say you went to Air Assault or Mountain Assault school or something- guess what....... That has been reported by me and a few others, and is supposed to get fixed.

     

    Thank you for the heads up. 

  7. 42 minutes ago, pacmanx1 said:

    While I do agree with the above posts, be forewarned that some VAROs and the Evidence Intake Center are requiring some veterans to fill out a new VA 526EZ Form especially if their denied claim is well beyond a years old. I had the VA return my VA 20-0995 Form and had me fill out a new VA 526EZ Form to reopen my claim and then denied my claim even with a new Contractor LHI Favorable Medical Opinion. My appeal will hit the three years mark this year and yes, this appeal is under the new AMA appeals at the BVA.

    Under what regulatory guidance did they claim that? That is not regulation as far as I know- and I see a lot of supplemental claims. 

  8. true- you may have high frequency hearing loss, which, when paired with tinnitus, really sucks. Even a 0% rating is a win, though, because you can get hearing aids to boost those frequencies and many have a subtone that helps cancel out the tinnitus. The last pair of Phonak's I got do this, and also let me adjust hearing more to the front, rear, or all around, and bass/trebel. They are also rechargeable just like a pair of earbuds, so I don't have to worry about batteries, either.

  9. That I don't know since I don't work with the SAH grants people, I was just confirming where she said we are under a CR - that much is true, and I know it has affected us on the benefits side of things, so hearing that it affecting another section in some way, to me, would not be unexpected. 

  10. 2 hours ago, relatively happy camper said:

    A couple of things to know here:  Any copies the VA gets, from you, they "probably" consider that they could have been altered by you, so they will most/always often get them directly from your med records source.  Also, VA evaluators are evaluated basically by how quickly they move the claim from pile A to pile B(I know old style phrase, as everything is electronically, these days but I'm sure you'll understand what I mean).  They also are never rated on how much of their work is done properly, just moving one pile to the next pile.  

    Please note that these comments are my opinion only, based on 34yrs of dealing w/my claims.

    Incorrect on several counts. All evidence is weighed by the rater and weighted based on probative value. We don't 'consider any copy could have been altered by you'. I see hundreds of pages a day of veteran-submitted records- STRs, OMPF, private medical, police reports, Investigative notes, etc. Per the MR everything is accepted on face value unless something is glaringly wrong with it. For example, I have seen a doctored DD214 before that ended up being part of an OIG investigation into fraudulent enrichment. It does happen but it's pretty rare.

    We aren't just rated on 'moving something from pile A to pile B'. The performance standards that we are evaluated on are 7 pages long; there are 11 different sections of things that we are evaluated on per individual claim, though not all of those apply to every given claim. One of our three critical evaluative ratings is based on accuracy, and we are reviewed for it every month. I have a meeting with my supervisor sometime in the next few days for last month's review. The three critical elements are what determines if you are promotable later, and they follow me in my eOPF no matter where I go. 

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