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The Evidence Does Not Show A Confirmed Diagnosis Of Ptsd

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adkins7b

Question

I have a civilian doctor that had diagnosed me with ptsd, my denial letter says the evidence does not show a confirmed diagnosis of ptsd which would permit a finding of service connection.

The available medical evidence is in sufficient to confirm a link bewteen current symptoms and an in-service stressor.

I have only been seeing civilian doctors but am going to va shrink next month. I have a few in service stressors, being shot at is one of them and a buddy letter from a guy who is still active duty to support it. Another was i was working security duty during 911 and months after words, it was alot of pressure especially since a cell got arrested with explosives and maps to the local bases.

There where a few other crazy things that happend in naples italy, tow truck trivers illegally took my car and tried to extort me which lead to a very violent incident. I have a medical report in my SMR, I wasn't injured bad but two them went to the the hospital.

Ok now you read all this and say, oh you where not in combat, bla bla.. tell you the truth I didnt think it messed with me. But after looking at my medical records I know this lead to my anxiety.

2008 two years after my honorable disharge, now we are into my oth period. I broke down told the sleep doc, about anger prob, anxiety depression, all the other crap.

2008 navy labeled me with chronic anxiety, I don't know maybe I need my doctor to write another letter.

I will go to the dav soon and ask advice, my doctor is upset that they did not take him information and is willing to write up an imo for no extra charge.

Any suggestions

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Don't ever say "oh you where not in combat, bla bla.." PTSD is NOT COMBAT POST-TRAUMATIC STRESS DISORDER. It DOES NOT have to do with JUST combat. People get PTSD from everyday stress, either from jobs, relationships, accidents, or anything that causes a lot of stress. So don't ever say that sentence again or ever look down on yourself because you weren't in combat.

I certainly agree that a veteran does not have to experience combat to have PTSD

but the examples above would not support a diagnosis for PTSD.

JMHO

Carlie passed away in November 2015 she is missed.

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