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brokensoldier244th

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Everything posted by brokensoldier244th

  1. They won’t, you can only be rated for one MH condition. They will likely combine them.
  2. Not or the PTSD dx, just the stressor events you are claiming. I'm assuming this is a 21-0781 or 0781a?
  3. It's doesn't have to be exact dates, but a general range so we can find it in your records without guessing helps.
  4. 21-4138's are VBA forms and only go to VBA. Not sure on the call center people, if they have access to one or both but I do know that what access they have is limited and they aren't cleared to see as much as I can.
  5. We can only access VAMC in the context of a claim. Every login is audited. No, you can't un-authorize it. We are required by federal law to gather all federal records that we can find, and private, but, private is a different form and it only authorizes gathering records for a period of 1 yr.
  6. Its convoluted but you could try this.... https://www.itgeared.com/how-to-make-tiktok-photo-slideshow-slower/
  7. You should slow down the auto advance to the next screen.
  8. The two systems are separate on purpose. We have limited ability to look at VHA- to get Capri records and whatnot for VAMC treatment. We cannot alter or update anything on that side. They can't alter anything on the VBA side. They are umbrella'd under "VA" but they are, legally, and for privacy purposes, 2 separate organizations that require permissions and/or authorizations in order to examine each other's systems, and even then only to a limited ability.
  9. I agree, they don't. I have to get into the weeds with Quality raters sometimes to justify actions that I take on the claims that I work. 3.156 addresses evidence that was previously submitted but not considered due to VA error, or subsequent evidence that clearly shows that the contention should have been rated X from Y date instead of whatever they decided originally, and since you were appealing for an EED the general rules do not apply. In the abstract, most veterans that file a claim after a decision closes that isn't based on something like EED, or 1151 (VA malpractice), or some special OIG review, will fall under the rule that the effective date is the date of the new claim since it was not a continued appeal. We all kinda got off the subject of the OP, though- he was asking why evidence submitted after the decision wasn't considered as part of the prior claim. Who said LandNav was easy, right?
  10. You'll have to send a 4318, or call to verify what is showing, there is more than 1 place to update addresses within VA systems and it sounds like one may have gotten missed. It would be faster to call.
  11. Yup, and if you want to you can print off prior decision letters at VA.gov under your claims status, too. That way perhaps they could identify some other claim that may have not been rated correctly, or if evidence was submitted but not listed as evidence in the decision letter.
  12. If you wanted something more specific you could have asked. I was answering Rattlers general question.
  13. They are all supplemental claims. The difference is in the recognition of the effective date. If you are alleging an EED or a CUE you are asking for that specifically and they have specific standards required, and specific things reviewed to determine if the effective date is correct. If you just disagree with a decision, it's also a supplemental, but outside of a year after a decision the effective date is that of the newly filed supplemental not the original claim.
  14. You can, you just don't get the original filling date if you file the supplemental more than a year after the denial or rating.
  15. Joint pain and fibro are pretty common MUCMIS (medically unexplained chronic multisystem illness) under CFR 3.317. Scroll down to section 'baby b' (lower case b) there is the list of MUCMIs that apply to SW Asia/Gulf https://www.ecfr.gov/current/title-38/chapter-I/part-3/subpart-A/subject-group-ECFR39056aee4e9ff13/section-3.317 Also, https://www.publichealth.va.gov/exposures/gulfwar/medically-unexplained-illness.asp
  16. Because it was closed. All evidence is admissible, up to the point of finalization- I see claims every day where its in a rating stage but not rated, but there is new evidence received- RFD (ready for decision) isn't 'closed' so it is added to the running claim. Once it has been finalized, though, that's it- it's done. You can argue for an increase based on New and Relevant information, or you could appeal the original decision, although it sounds like the info you would want to appeal with, while new and relevant, wasn't available at the time of the rating so it wouldn't be an error. Unless we had other known means of obtaining it, like 21-4142 auth to request it from your private providers but didn't, or you supplied it and it was overlooked it wouldn't be insufficient development.
  17. Hey, Carson Basically, the fiduciary hub (a subset of the VBA/VSRs that deals with things like pension, fiduciaries, and check retrievals for errant direct deposits, among other things) will get with DFAS to figure out what was initially sent as severance, then go back through their own records to see what was sent out to you as disability compensation. It can take a while. How long is awhile? I can't really say- because I don't know, I don't work as a fiduciary and I never have, at least yet. Sometimes your DD214 lists severance in the remarks block. I think you can also go through the DFAS website and request pay records, but I know how far back. I have to do it sometimes in my capacity as a VSR to determine things like "Were you on AD as a reservist/NG when XYZ happened" if you or DoD/Dept of [Insert Service Here] doesn't have a complete record set of your duty weekends, ATs, Active Reserve or Guard, or deployments. I can usually get an answer back in about a week but it's just a printout of whatever date range I told them I was interested in. No editorializing or commentary, and it's often not columnized very well so it's a pain to read. Excel to the rescue!
  18. We are never "just looking at one someone's claim " on its own. It's either waiting for something internally, externally, a tiebreaker opinion, or it's in a queue getting electronically shuffled to the next smallest workload. A vso can look at it and tell you. The phone people can't see much, they don't have the same access level that we so.
  19. The steps for a supplemental are the same as for a regular claim. A VSR develops the new evidence, submits it for an exam if needed, or sends it to a rater. Sometimes the rater determines that something needs to still be done, so they send it back to a vsr. Vsr completes whatever "it" was, then sends to the ratings queue. After that it's dependent on what station pulls it down and how backed up they are. If it was waiting for a VA c&p result then it's also dependent on getting the results of that, too.
  20. You dont need witnesses statements (buddy statements, 21-4138, 21-10210, whatever) but they help, in the absence of a memo or day orders or something that says"I burned stuff...". They aren't required to filte a claim, and you can file now and gather the stuff up afterwards.
  21. It is because we use centralized posting and most claim mail comes into or goes out of that location.
  22. At 15 yrs the amount of effort and documentation it would take to reduce would be considerable- at worst, and nigh impossible, other than fraud, at best. Plus, much if the time if your claimed contention doesn't span across other contentions we don't go digging anyway, no time and no reason.
  23. If one of your SC conditions is 100 then a combined rating of 60 or higher for things not part of that 100% would be statutory SMC-S. Look up SMCs and you'll see that in some circumstances more that 100% is possible.
  24. Generally, we don't. I don't look at older decisions on a regular claim unless it somehow impacts whatever the current contention might be (secondary) or, IU/Housebound/A and A. Otherwise we pretty much stay in our lane. RFE (requests for examinations) is still a thing, but highly reduced, because the computer sets the date 2,3,5 yrs out from when you get rated but now it comes to one of us for review before it just kicks out an exam letter. Keep in mind if I am looking through things for 1 contention and I find something egregiously incorrect (good or bad) I have to kick it up to a rater or quality to be reviewed to make sure the appropriate regulations in M21/38CFR were applied correctly- that's what I'm doing now on the subproject that I am working on. If we look at your PMR (private medical- if you have submitted- we don't just have access to that) or Capri (VAMC stuff) and you haven't improved, we cancel the exam. We aren't doctors but it doesn't take whiz kid to look at a range of several months or a few years of VAMC record, CFR38 Part 4 (ratings schedule), your current rating, and connect the dots to see if there has been a serious and sustained improvement over time and not just a 'good day'.
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