Jump to content

Ask Your VA Claims Questions | Read Current Posts 
Read VA Disability Claims Articles
Search | View All Forums | Donate | Blogs | New Users | Rules 

  • tbirds-va-claims-struggle (1).png

  • 01-2024-stay-online-donate-banner.png

     

  • 0

Look At My Imo

Rate this question


babyray

Question

Allright you guys. Look at the attached IMO for my claim for TDIU filed in Nov/09. Give me your opinion on it. How would you rate it, is it good enought? Looking to hear from you real soon. Thx. scan0003.pdf

babyray

scan0003.pdf

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Answers 16
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters For This Question

Top Posters For This Question

Recommended Posts

Baby Ray

Have you applied for SSD? If you get SSD that helps with TDIU. If you get TDIU that helps with SSD. The IMO from Dr. Bash sounds good. I know you paid a pretty price for it. I would just wait and see what the VA says on this. If what Dr. Bash says about you is verfied then that is a good IU claim in my opinion. I know what Brocovet is saying, but often Doctors just won't cooperate with each other. When they write an opinion they hedge and don't want to make really concrete statements, but Bash will do that. A medical opinion that leaves room for doubt can hurt more than help. A really good IMO or IME can just blow the VA out of the water.

I got such a good IME that the VA just incorporated it into the decision. I sent in the IME SC'ed for one condition and the decision came back SCing me for five conditions, heh, heh.

john999, I am 71 and has been drawing SSI pension since 2002. So drawing SSD is moot. I had 2 private doc who examined me andgave me an IME but my disabilities were denied. Dr Bash has done 2 IME's which has gotten me 90%. IME's do work if you have good medical evidence. Thx

babyray

Link to comment
Share on other sites

:rolleyes:

You guys are extremely great & knowledgeable in giving me your facts and opinion in reference to my post name " Look At My Imo." Y'all deserve all the credit a great group of veterans can be given. One more time, look at this attachment. This is page 6 & 7 (you read pages 4 & 5). It covers some of the topic we discuss, give me your opinion. Dr Bash's IME is 8 pages long & his curriculum vitae covers another 8 pages. Read it and get back w/ me. Thx. DR_Bash_page_6_7.pdf

babyray

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Lead Moderator

babyray

Dr. Bash's IMO does seem to "hit a home run". Does the VA have Cand P exams which conflict with Dr. Bash's opinion? If the C and P examiner says something like

either:

a. The Veteran isnt sick...or

b. The Veteran is sick, but it isnt service connected.

Then this IMO should help you, remembering what I mentioned in the post titled, "Warning, Danger, Will Robinson".

What I was suggesting is to be careful about comparing a Dr. Bash IMO (where he never actually examined you) with a C and P examiner who did an exam on you and reviewed your medical records. The reason: A doctor who actually examined you is probably more qualified to say how you are than a doctor who never even saw you. I think NOD suggests this is a "booby trap" for Veteans. In other words a Vets spends thousands on an IMO only to find out it wont trump and C and P exam because the C and P examiner saw you and Dr. Bash did not, and Dr. Bash merely interpreted what other docs said about you.

To prevent this, try to get an Independent Medical EXAM, where they see you, not just look at your records. I am just trying to be helpfull. For some more helpfull informantion, go to http://hcvets.com/AskNOD/index.html and read some of his posts.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now


  • Tell a friend

    Love HadIt.com’s VA Disability Community Vets helping Vets since 1997? Tell a friend!
  • Recent Achievements

    • spazbototto earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Paul Gretza earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Troy Spurlock went up a rank
      Community Regular
    • KMac1181 earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • jERRYMCK earned a badge
      Week One Done
  • Our picks

    • I met with a VSO today at my VA Hospital who was very knowledgeable and very helpful.  We decided I should submit a few new claims which we did.  He told me that he didn't need copies of my military records that showed my sick call notations related to any of the claims.  He said that the VA now has entire military medical record on file and would find the record(s) in their own file.  It seemed odd to me as my service dates back to  1981 and spans 34 years through my retirement in 2015.  It sure seemed to make more sense for me to give him copies of my military medical record pages that document the injuries as I'd already had them with me.  He didn't want my copies.  Anyone have any information on this.  Much thanks in advance.  
      • 4 replies
    • Caluza Triangle defines what is necessary for service connection
      Caluza Triangle – Caluza vs Brown defined what is necessary for service connection. See COVA– CALUZA V. BROWN–TOTAL RECALL

      This has to be MEDICALLY Documented in your records:

      Current Diagnosis.   (No diagnosis, no Service Connection.)

      In-Service Event or Aggravation.
      Nexus (link- cause and effect- connection) or Doctor’s Statement close to: “The Veteran’s (current diagnosis) is at least as likely due to x Event in military service”
      • 0 replies
    • Do the sct codes help or hurt my disability rating 
    • VA has gotten away with (mis) interpreting their  ambigious, , vague regulations, then enforcing them willy nilly never in Veterans favor.  

      They justify all this to congress by calling themselves a "pro claimant Veteran friendly organization" who grants the benefit of the doubt to Veterans.  

      This is not true, 

      Proof:  

          About 80-90 percent of Veterans are initially denied by VA, pushing us into a massive backlog of appeals, or worse, sending impoverished Veterans "to the homeless streets" because  when they cant work, they can not keep their home.  I was one of those Veterans who they denied for a bogus reason:  "Its been too long since military service".  This is bogus because its not one of the criteria for service connection, but simply made up by VA.  And, I was a homeless Vet, albeit a short time,  mostly due to the kindness of strangers and friends. 

          Hadit would not be necessary if, indeed, VA gave Veterans the benefit of the doubt, and processed our claims efficiently and paid us promptly.  The VA is broken. 

          A huge percentage (nearly 100 percent) of Veterans who do get 100 percent, do so only after lengthy appeals.  I have answered questions for thousands of Veterans, and can only name ONE person who got their benefits correct on the first Regional Office decision.  All of the rest of us pretty much had lengthy frustrating appeals, mostly having to appeal multiple multiple times like I did. 

          I wish I know how VA gets away with lying to congress about how "VA is a claimant friendly system, where the Veteran is given the benefit of the doubt".   Then how come so many Veterans are homeless, and how come 22 Veterans take their life each day?  Va likes to blame the Veterans, not their system.   
    • Welcome to hadit!  

          There are certain rules about community care reimbursement, and I have no idea if you met them or not.  Try reading this:

      https://www.va.gov/resources/getting-emergency-care-at-non-va-facilities/

         However, (and I have no idea of knowing whether or not you would likely succeed) Im unsure of why you seem to be so adamant against getting an increase in disability compensation.  

         When I buy stuff, say at Kroger, or pay bills, I have never had anyone say, "Wait!  Is this money from disability compensation, or did you earn it working at a regular job?"  Not once.  Thus, if you did get an increase, likely you would have no trouble paying this with the increase compensation.  

          However, there are many false rumors out there that suggest if you apply for an increase, the VA will reduce your benefits instead.  

      That rumor is false but I do hear people tell Veterans that a lot.  There are strict rules VA has to reduce you and, NOT ONE of those rules have anything to do with applying for an increase.  

      Yes, the VA can reduce your benefits, but generally only when your condition has "actually improved" under ordinary conditions of life.  

          Unless you contacted the VA within 72 hours of your medical treatment, you may not be eligible for reimbursement, or at least that is how I read the link, I posted above. Here are SOME of the rules the VA must comply with in order to reduce your compensation benefits:

      https://www.law.cornell.edu/cfr/text/38/3.344

       
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

Guidelines and Terms of Use