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deaddebate

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Everything posted by deaddebate

  1. Probably. Determine which office finally DQ'd you (MEPS CMO, AETC/SG, etc.), and request your sponsoring unit reach out for clarification/pressure. Good idea. Talk to your doc; see what he thinks.
  2. First determine your exact diagnosis (or history of). Is it Dysthymia, Adjustment disorder with depressed mood, Major depressive disorder, Unspecified depressive disorder, or something else? If you can find your specific ICD-9/ICD-10 code, that will help greatly.
  3. That's an interesting question and outside my realm. I'd defer to the MAJCOM/A3. But if they approve it, your waiver likelihood is much better.
  4. deaddebate

    VA Claims

    The VASRD needs to be drastically reformed. As long as Sleep Apnea needing a CPAP gets 50 and other extreme ratings, there is too much incentive for the status quo.
  5. That seems right, but it's too speculative. You won't know until you officially ask the question in the form of a waiver request to the AF. I'm still very pessimistic, unfortunately.
  6. It is waive-able for straight Accession (non-fly). It is a hard DQ for flying with no waiver potential.
  7. I got a bit more information from discussion with some peers, and I should retract my optimism. Assuming the Navy would not give you a waiver because you are not asymptomatic due to the pain, your chances of staying in fighters in the Air Force are diminished. You also almost certainly will need an MEB/Fitness For Duty, either before you leave the Navy or as soon as you arrive in the AF. Your best chance is probably to pursue RPA. Whether the Navy would consider you for non-high performance airframes is a question for your Navy FS.
  8. See AFI 48-123: I have no idea what the operational and educational standards are. There's the medical requirement--it isn't driven by what is operationally required. Chance of a FCI waiver is minimal. Standards change and the AF now has a RPA-only category, namely FCIIU. That's the only options I see for you. There are some helicopter spots in the AF, and there are numerous RPA spots, make a choice and good luck.
  9. After reading more about the condition, I realized you're actually referencing autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease (ADPKD). I thought you had a generic cystic kidney disease rather than the genetic disorder. Waiver approval is very good if you are otherwise healthy (with hypertension as a known co-morbidity and necessary treatment). The information from my previous post remains relevant and accurate, other than as follows as outlined under "Congential Urinary Anomalies": You may also see a Urologist in addition to a nephrologist. Any history of kidney stones or chronic UTIs must be very carefully scrutinized. If you have intracranial cysts as a complication of the ADPKD, that would probably be concurrently considered as a separate condition related to "Subarachnoid Hemorrhage, Non-Traumatic." You would likely need a Neuro consult and associated additional testing, and be referred to ACS at WPAFB for further consideration.
  10. Yep, you'd need to find another rotary airframe for the AF or go to RPA's to qualify for a FCII waiver, which is your only chance.
  11. If you're flying the same or similar airframe/platform, you'll need to pass AF FCII standards IAW AFI 48-123 para 6.24.7.1. Yes, you will need a separate AF Waiver. The condition is listed in the AF waiver Guide under "Kidney Disease, Chronic." Thankfully, the FCII waiver is very achievable. For FCII and Trained, Kidney Disease stages 1-3 are waive-able and all exams can be accomplished locally, Stage 4 requires a TDY to WPAFB (ACS) and waiver is unlikely. Stage 5 is not waive-able. You will need a recent Nephrology consult. Contact your Navy FS and coordinate with an AF FS to discuss the AF-approved Hypertension and Pain medications available to you, and make sure you are taking the right meds. You need to demonstrate control on these medications for the waiver to pass. The list is known as the "Official Air Force Aerospace Medicine Approved Medications," last updated on 30 May 2015. Separate of all this is the (non-flying) Accession/Retention standard for the Air Force. I believe you are very lucky that you are currently serving, and you must not have a break in service in your conversion to the AF. AFI 48-123 para 4.2.1. would not apply to you because you are already Commissioned. Therefore, DODI 6130.03 (Accession) does not apply, just the normal retention standard of the Medical Standards Directory, which states: Because you are well controlled and at the earliest stages, I think you might get away with not needing an MEB also. Either way, your Recruiter will probably need to push a waiver for you and it will similarly probably be approved. Get your gaining unit to write a nice memorandum of support, including some statement of needing Pilots to meet mission requirements and that you are excellently qualified among their applicants. Those letters do help. If unfortunately your condition and prognosis is poor, you MUST get any LOD benefits through the Navy. The Air Force Reserve would deny your LOD because the Navy owned you at the time of diagnosis and development. Are you AD Navy or Reserve Navy? Finally, I looked for similar cases in the AF flying waiver system and your chances are very good.
  12. There are multiple ways to measure the phorias but I won't pretend to understand them. Anyway, the FCI and FCII standard is 6 exophoria & 10 esophoria. stuckindayton is correct--waiver likelihood is high. ETA: Stupid Tapatalk.
  13. Did you wear glasses during the test? Even if you don't need glasses to manifest to 20/20, glasses may help and become required for flying duty. You'll probably need a Defective Depth Perception waiver. You may need to accomplish an independent Optometry/Ophthalmology evaluation for further scheduling and processing. Talk to your Officer Accession Recruiter.
  14. No, if you're pursuing pilot, you'll probably get FCI with a myopia waiver. Your vision doesn't dictate your desired category, it dictates whether you get approved, waivered or denied for a given category.
  15. Call your Flight Med Clinic or go during sick call hours. You should have been DNIF'd. You need an Aeromedical Dispo.
  16. That's the old standard. Here's the current: And here's the waiver criteria, if you exceed the levels above:
  17. The Medical Standards Directory (MSD) recently updated and fully created an independent RPA category. Previously FCIIU generally was only considered or pursued as a back-up following waiver denial for other higher categories (FCI, IA, or IIX). It can now be more easily screened and pursued individually by local MTF's, and most importantly waivers will be easier to delineate and pursue for solely FCIIU applicants. Basically this marks a change to accommodate more RPA applicants. I imagine this is just further cultural shift towards the RPA community and to more quickly disposition borderline pilot exams and push more folks to RPA than a simple, universal DQ in some instances.
  18. AFI 36-2905 updated last week. Mothers now get a PT test deferment for a full year after they deliver. It doesn't specify how long they get Fitness Restrictions (what exercises they can or can't do), but that the Fitness Assessment Exemption (not testing) goes to the 12 month after delivery, and the member would become non-current/overdue on the 1st day of the 13th month. As currently implemented, this is purely a personnel standard that is partially implemented through medical, but it is technically not a medical deferment or deployment restriction.
  19. Ah. My account was deleted in the conversion. Should be fixed now.
  20. Short answer: yes, frequently. I believe excessive phoria is lumped in with the Defective Depth Perception category. Looking in the waiver guide, linked in my sig, it shows about a third of waivers for for FCI for retinal hole/tears are DQ'd. The DP is probably unlikely to be DQ'd. It is a definite possibility, but I wouldn't worry about it much. I suspect the odds are in your favor.
  21. Really? I guess I'm just jaded and numb. I have a Documenting Reality account and I regularly browse 4chan--this stuff doesn't phase me. I'm not trying to sound like an internet tough guy. I'm just surprised by everyone's delicate sensibilities when discussing the video, here, in the news, and on social media.
  22. It's a bit annoying that I get generic Notification and a PM alert whenever I receive a PM. Why isn't it just an alert under the PM?
  23. http://www.defense.gov/News/News-Transcripts/Transcript-View/Article/614654/department-of-defense-press-briefing-by-secretary-james-and-gen-welsh-on-the-st
  24. http://www.defense.gov/News/News-Transcripts/Transcript-View/Article/614654/department-of-defense-press-briefing-by-secretary-james-and-gen-welsh-on-the-st
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