mb76 Posted July 4, 2021 Share Posted July 4, 2021 I can google things such as "secondary to PTSD" but I was wondering if there is an exhaustive list of (primary) service connected disabilities that vets have used to get secondary service connection. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
0 Moderator brokensoldier244th Posted July 4, 2021 Moderator Share Posted July 4, 2021 While I understand your frustration deedub, not every VA examiner opinion is the end all be all. I've seen raters override both external and VA examiner opinions, sometimes in favor of and sometimes not. You are correct not all VA examiners are Dr's- there's a whole host of reasons for that spanning everything from cost to hire MDs at an attractive rate, MDs not wanting to work for the Govt, whatever. That said, while not in your case, there are a whole host of doctors that will pretty much write whatever you want, too- they use veiled wording on their sites and charge a boatload for their IMO's, and almost never have they actually seen you, or your records, other than what you provide to them. VA examiners have access to your whole file of medical-your submissions, VAMC, whatever is in there. Outside doctors only have what you give them. That is the main reason that an NP or ANP in the VA sometimes has an opinion that over-rules a doctor, because the ANP can see some things that the outside doctor can't. Its a combination of both propensity of evidence, and weight. I'm not commenting on the 'rightness' of it, because every situation is different, just trying to explain for 'the folks at home' a little bit of what I see from my end. I've read some weird stuff too, where a vet is clearly DX'd with something (in the case of one I saw the other day, Camp LJ) and had clear service dates during the time period, but was denied conditions for it due to no in-service event. Now, 2 of the conditions weren't on CFR 3.309 and the opinion was written by a GP that didn't check to see what conditions are presumed, otherwise they would have known that the opinion they were writing about lung nodules was not a slam dunk based on military exposure. Had the checked 3.309, however, they would have been able to infer the various carcinoma's the veteran had, and SHOULD have approached it from that angle- it was a presumed condition. The Earth is degenerating these days. Bribery and corruption abound.Children no longer mind their parents, every man wants to write a book,and it is evident that the end of the world is fast approaching. --17 different possible sources, all lacking verifiable attribution. B.S. Doane College, Mgt Info Systems/Systems Analysis 2008 M.S.Ed. Purdue University, Instructional Development and Technology, Feb. 2021 M.S. Purdue University Information Technology/InfoSec, Dec 2022 100% P/T MDD Spine Radiculopathy Sleep Apnea Some other stuff -------------------------------------------B.S. Info Systems Mgt/Systems Analysis-Doane College 2008M.S. Instructional Technology and Design- Purdue University 2021 (I AM NOT A RATER- I work the claims BEFORE they are rated, annotating medical evidence in your records, VA and Legal documents, and DA/DD forms- basically a paralegal/vso/etc except that I also evaluate your records based on Caluza and try to justify and schedule the exams that you go to based on whether or not your records have enough in them to warrant those) Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
0 HadIt.com Elder john999 Posted July 4, 2021 HadIt.com Elder Share Posted July 4, 2021 I had a C&P exam by a VA neurologist who said my PN was secondary to DMII and that it was pretty severe. That exam was overruled by a VA PCP who said my PN was not apparent and was not due to DMII. The VA took the word of the horse doctor over the board certified neurologist. I actually knew the father of the neurologist. He told his daughter to quit and get a real job. It islike having a podiatrist overrule an orthopedic surgeon. Nowhere but the VA or worker's compensation. OWCP has contract doctors who are hitmen but you would think the VA would not treat vets like that. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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mb76
I can google things such as "secondary to PTSD" but I was wondering if there is an exhaustive list of (primary) service connected disabilities that vets have used to get secondary service connection.
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broncovet
No. Just because you are SC for ______ in no way guarantees you will be listed as secondary for _____. "Even when" causal studies show a correlation to the 2, you probably did not participate
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