gangof4 Posted June 10, 2022 Share Posted June 10, 2022 When I retired, I received my medical records which were unfortunately lost. How can the VA research what I was treated for while on active duty if the original records were lost while in my possession? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
0 Moderator brokensoldier244th Posted June 10, 2022 Moderator Share Posted June 10, 2022 The service didn't hand you the originals. We go to the records repositories where they were filed. Depending on when you got out they could be electronic, as well. 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 Dustoff1970 Posted June 11, 2022 Share Posted June 11, 2022 Fortunately thanks to advice of a senior Army Warrant Officer pilot in 1968 I made copies of all important medical and other records in Vietnam, Japan and USA with assist of medical clerks and this habit carried over into my civilian/veteran life with all my VA medical records from 1985 to present day. This has paid of tremendously for me in obtaining VA benefits for over 30 years. I make sure to never send my only one copy/s of records to the VA and always have multi copies of just about everything. Being a lifelong pack rack has worked for me in VA claims and appeals approved in a timely manner. Maybe younger vets will see this comment I hope. Tbird 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
0 HadIt.com Elder GBArmy Posted June 11, 2022 HadIt.com Elder Share Posted June 11, 2022 Dustoff is spot on. I tell veterans, even those active duty, to make copies of their med and other records. Even though records are supposed to all be available electronically, we all have seen how that doesn't work all the time. Make the extra effort and make copies. Dustoff1970 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
0 Founder Tbird Posted June 11, 2022 Founder Share Posted June 11, 2022 Agree with @GBArmy. @Dustoff 11is spot on. The number one thing I tell active duty members make copies of all your records. Medical and Personnel records. I also recommend that they send letters home to themselves after they take part in any operation or anything else that happens, accidents, witnessed things, burn pit duty. etc. They can send the letters home to a family member or friend. When they get out and get home, they can choose to open and read them or not. However, if they have a claim it can provide valuable information. They should include other members name involved and any other descriptive information they can think of. Dustoff1970 1 Tbird Founder HadIt.com Veteran To Veteran LLC - Founded Jan 20, 1997 HadIt.com Veteran To Veteran | Community Forum | RallyPoint | FaceBook | LinkedIn | About Me Time Dedicated to HadIt.com Veterans and my brothers and sisters: 65,700 - 109,500 Hours Over Thirty Years I am writing my memoirs and would love it if you could help a shipmate out and look at it. I've had a few challenges, perhaps the same as you. I relate them here to demonstrate that we can learn, overcome, and find purpose in life. The stories can be harrowing to read; they were challenging to live. Remember that each story taught me something I would need once I found my purpose, and my purpose was and is HadIt.com Veterans. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
0 The Fight Posted June 15, 2022 Share Posted June 15, 2022 They will always be sent to your home of record at that VA Regional Office. You may need to contact your state congressman for assistance. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
0 Moderator brokensoldier244th Posted June 15, 2022 Moderator Share Posted June 15, 2022 They are not sent to home of record- they are sent to NPRC, and then they end up in your VA record when you file a claim, or when we request them manually (in the case of pre-electronic records) asdf 1 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...
Question
gangof4
When I retired, I received my medical records which were unfortunately lost. How can the VA research what I was treated for while on active duty if the original records were lost while in my possession?
Link to comment
Share on other sites
Top Posters For This Question
9
7
6
5
Popular Days
Jun 17
12
Jun 15
8
Jun 16
7
Jun 23
4
Top Posters For This Question
Lemuel 9 posts
brokensoldier244th 7 posts
allansc2005 6 posts
Dustoff1970 5 posts
Popular Days
Jun 17 2022
12 posts
Jun 15 2022
8 posts
Jun 16 2022
7 posts
Jun 23 2022
4 posts
Popular Posts
Dustoff1970
Fortunately thanks to advice of a senior Army Warrant Officer pilot in 1968 I made copies of all important medical and other records in Vietnam, Japan and USA with assist of medical clerks and this h
GBArmy
Dustoff is spot on. I tell veterans, even those active duty, to make copies of their med and other records. Even though records are supposed to all be available electronically, we all have seen how th
Tbird
Agree with @GBArmy. @Dustoff 11is spot on. The number one thing I tell active duty members make copies of all your records. Medical and Personnel records. I also recommend that they send letters home
37 answers to this question
Recommended Posts
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 accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now