BVA–LIVER TXPLANT+HCV=PYRAMIDING

Imagine having a transplant and still being infected with HCV. Hardly a strange scenario. The St. Pete RO must be hardcore. All they want to give Mr. TampaVet is 30% on a post transplant with 10% thrown in for his transplant scar. Ouch! What of the HCV side effects? The fatigue and all the other symptoms we invariably associate with HCV apparently are comprehended by the 30% in Diagnostic Code 7351-or are they?

Take a peek at this little-used  ploy to give you 10¢ on the dollar.

7351 Liver transplant:
For an indefinite period from the date of hospital admission for transplant surgery 100
Minimum 30
Note: A rating of 100 percent shall be assigned as of the date of hospital admission for transplant surgery and shall continue. One year following discharge, the appropriate disability rating shall be determined by mandatory VA examination. Any change in evaluation based upon that or any subsequent examination shall be subject to the provisions of § 3.105(e) of this chapter.

Now they’re stuck on stupid and think this is all that is permitted. The assumption that there is pyramiding under 38 CFR §4.14 is just that-an assumption on their part. There is nothing in DC 7351 discussing the disabilities one sees discussed in DC 7354. Here’s Veterans Law Judge (VLJ) J.A. Markey’s take on it.

The Veteran and his service representative also have contended that, because the Veteran’s hepatitis C associated with his status-post liver transplant has worsened, he is entitled to an initial rating greater than 30 percent under DC 7354. See 38 C.F.R. § 4.114, DC 7354 (2011). They alternatively have contended that the Veteran is entitled to a separate compensable rating for hepatitis C associated with his service-connected status-post liver transplant. The Veteran is not entitled to an initial rating greater than 30 percent for his service-connected status-post liver transplant with hepatitis C on the basis of worsening disability due to the residuals of his liver transplant surgery (including hepatitis C) because that would constitute pyramiding under the Rating Schedule. See 38 C.F.R. § 4.14 (2011).

What, exactly is contained in § 4.14 that provokes this interpretation?

§ 4.14

Avoidance of pyramiding.

The evaluation of the same disability under various diagnoses is to be avoided. Disability from injuries to the muscles, nerves, and joints of an extremity may overlap to a great extent, so that special rules are included in the appropriate bodily system for their evaluation. Dyspnea, tachycardia, nervousness, fatigability, etc., may result from many causes; some may be service connected, others, not. Both the use of manifestations not resulting from service-connected disease or injury in establishing the service-connected evaluation, and the evaluation of the same manifestation under different diagnoses are to be avoided.

Here are the two ratings for HCV which Tampaboy feels may be appropriate.

Daily fatigue, malaise, and anorexia, with minor weight loss and hepatomegaly, or; incapacitating episodes (with symptoms such as fatigue, malaise, nausea, vomiting, anorexia, arthralgia, and right upper quadrant pain) having a total duration of at least four weeks, but less than six weeks, during the past 12-month period 40
Daily fatigue, malaise, and anorexia (without weight loss or hepatomegaly), requiring dietary restriction or continuous medication, or; incapacitating episodes (with symptoms such as fatigue, malaise, nausea, vomiting, anorexia, arthralgia, and right upper quadrant pain) having a total duration of at least two weeks, but less than four weeks, during the past 12-month period 20

Nothing in DC 7351 discusses what is incorporated in DC 7354. Nothing. This is priceless as it will allow vA to dawdle for several more years and keep the Vet in poverty. Admittedly, part of the problem is the VSO (VFW) who is attacking this from the wrong angle. Johnny Tampa should have filed for both diagnostic codes rather than just the transplant code. His HCV is blooming like perennial pansies that can’t be quelled. Any thought of tossing in an Interferon napalm strike is out of the question as it would destroy the new liver in a heartbeat. vA raters wouldn’t know that because it is a medical problem way over their heads. St. Peter’s puzzle palace suffers the same problem as all ROs. They consult their M21 bible and run aground on the pyramid. No way to get around it can be ascertained because no one does their homework and actually looks up the ratings to discern the actual phraseology of the diagnostic code. What makes matters worse is this unfounded logic.

The Board also notes that the 30 percent rating currently assigned for the Veteran’s service-connected status-post liver transplant with hepatitis C contemplates moderate liver disability. The competent evidence does not show that the Veteran’s service-connected status-post liver transplant is more than moderately disabling such that he is entitled to an initial rating greater than 30 percent under DC 7354 for hepatitis C associated with his service-connected status-post liver transplant.

Newsflash. Does anyone see any discussion of DC 7354 in DC 7351? In the same vein, does anyone see a 30% rating listed under DC 7354? Ruh-oh, Rorge. Here’s another problem area. Once a Vet has established service connection, he/she no longer needs a medical nexus to rationalize a higher rating. This is accomplished via medical examinations or C&P determinations. A nexus is to tie two events together-e.g. a GSW and subsequent HCV via a transfusion. Requiring a nexus for a higher rating is not required. That a VLJ would sign his name to this is criminal-or evidence of poor legal training.

The BVA usually spots this and clarifies the RO’s thinking on these mishaps but here they simply parrot the RO’s take on it and buttress it with CAVC precedent. Johnbo has until December 3rd to untie or cut this Gordian knot. A quick trip up to 625 Wagonburner Ave. is the sure ticket. I’m sure the VFW SO is still back at the RO scratching his head and telling Johnny it’s time to roll up and go home after a good fight.

Service Officers are not trained to spot inequities. They are taught the intricacies of mail delivery. They are taught how to parse a C-file and determine if you have anything in your contemporary service medical records that will support a filing for your current illness. This is why they have such a hard time with our complicated HCV claims. Rarely is there ever a smoking gun to point to for HCV. Much conjecture about risks is the only avenue. Giving them their due, they are unprepared for the technical prowess needed to win these claims. This is why you see that timeworn, hackneyed phrase ” There is no diagnosis of HCV in the Veteran’s medical records showing a diagnosis of HCV in 1967-1971.” No rebuttal based on the fact that it wasn’t discovered, let alone diagnosable until 1989 is ever presented. Rarely, this occurs when an astute judge at the Court or the occasional VLJ remarks on it and kicks it back for a remand. Otherwise, it goes on to be an unappealed denial.

The introduction of the transplant diagnostic code was a token offering to tide us over the rough spot of hospitalization as it rightfully should. The 30% follow-on is poorly conceived as it comprehends absolutely nothing more than the residuals of a transplant. Likewise, tossing in 10% for scarring is a poor panacea.  Why is it they gave him the scarring rating without a prolonged discussion on whether that was pyramiding, too? With their tortured logic, it could be extrapolated that scarring after surgery was contemplated as well. Doesn’t surgery imply there will be a surgical scar of some sort? At best, there would be an accounting at the promised one year, post-surgical examination that addressed the secondary symptoms that are invariably present from the underlying disease-i.e. HCV. Here, it is entirely absent or relegated to a dark corner and given short shrift.

The whole decision is flawed on its face and ripe for a reversal and remand. Why the VFW has been AWOL on this in their arguments on appeal is typical. They are Leaglezoom.com, not accomplished law dogs. Their talent lies in their ability to fill out a Form 21-22 Power of Attorney and playing mailman. Beyond that, they are over their heads in the legal deep end. This is what passes for justice in our nonadversarial, Veteran-friendly, ex parte judicial forum.

DELIVERING VETERANS’
MAIL SINCE 1899

Posted in BvA HCV decisions, Veterans Law, VSOs | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

VA–HOUSTON, WE HAVE A PROBLEM.

I often wondered about this. Considering this site is not exactly pro-vA on any given  decade, I wondered if the day would come when I found them camped out on the country road in and out of my neighborhood snapping pictures of my legendary goat and pony show.

Fortunately that hasn’t happened yet although I have had an inordinate amount of small aircraft and chopper traffic overhead. No, gentle readers, I am not suffering in the last throes of conspiracy fever-yet. Or wasn’t.  Member JM sends us this interesting snippet about an Air Force Vet in Houston getting the VARO ham-handed “knock it off or we’ll make you wish you had” treatment. So, what gives? First, as a disclaimer, I would point out Not it! JM sent it to me! No. That’s pure humor. I shirk from nothing- least of all the opprobrium of the vA. I’ll be dead before they can make life Hell for me. And they can’t deny me my spot at Arlington National Cemetery either.

After what happened to Keith Roberts up in Michigan, I’ve watched my six somewhat more frequently while wondering why he got a four year staycation at the Graybar Hotel for his misstep. Obviously the vA does not take kindly to criticism. Few do but then the government is ostensibly precluded from reacting viciously to hateful diatribes.

As often as I have poked fun and misidentified Unter Secretary for Paychecks Allison A. Hickey as the Under Secretary for Karaoke and HR, etc. , I haven’t received any ill will or threats to renegotiate my Permanent and Total status. I attribute that to one thing and one thing only. Over the years, while reading BVA HCV decisions, I found a common thread. The vA is far more likely to give its combat Veterans a little more slack than they are their non-combatants. Whether they are candid about it is immaterial. I never asked for 1154(b) status but my filings for HCV and AO were unequivocal as to the GSW and the ensuing transfusion in a far from sanitary USAID “hospital” being the culprit.

In the newer theatres in Southwest Asia (Iraq and Afstan), virtually everyone is a moving target and “combat veteran” is almost a given for Vets who have endured three or more deployments. Getting blown up by an IED fifty miles behind your own lines can be called whatever the military chooses, but the physical repercussions are the same.

In the Southeast Asian Boundary Dispute of 1961 to 1975, the vA has chosen to be far more discerning and, in the process, disenfranchised hundreds of thousands of Vets by a simple parsing of their MOS/AFSC. Anyone from the Vietnam conflict would know that a truck driver hauling goods from Saigon to Bien Hoa often got in some practice with his M-16 when he came under sniper fire even in the seventies after most of our combat troops were pulled out. Nevertheless, when filing for PTSD, absent any proof from the JSRRC, he is not going to prevail. It’s that simple. All the lay testimony in the world will not carry the day.

Doug Strand, the unfortunate “unclassified” combatant in this article, is going to suffer the same fate. The vA is of a mind that he is a small fry and thus the press will not feel compelled to accord him the same degree of sympathy. With this mentality, no Vet will be safe from recrimination by the vA. Unbeknownst to them, they have underestimated the power of Youtube. Now that his plight is coming to light, they feel threatened. I don’t know why. How their reputation can sink any lower after all they have done (or haven’t done) in the last sixty years since WW2 is not for conjecture. We speak of a backlog in terms of how long it takes to process a claim in 2012 as being unconscionable. Few would believe that I waited seven and one half months in 1994 for a rather simple claim denial for HCV/AO.  Technically, they still haven’t finished it and that’s why I’m pounding on the CAVC’s door eighteen years later.

I suspect Mr. Strand will soon discover that vA will back down. Good PR, like a stellar reputation, is hard to come by. Conversely, negative press is like a bad penny and hounds you for a long time. When you’re already in the doghouse with Congress, the last thing you need is an eager, self-appointed Dudley Doright running amok at the Houston RO threatening to cut some Vet off the rolls for voicing his disapproval with the process. Were that the case, I’m long overdue for a Texas-style, down home Barbecue and Necktie Party with all the fixins’.

CUPCAKE AND NOD FUN

P.S.     The family carving contest was held this afternoon. Princess ended up doing the kids’ and BJ did a magnificent monster. Cupcake went for Ghostbusters and I chose Win or Die. I’ll get the others for posting. We’ve come a long way, baby. Six months ago I planted the seeds for these gourds.

Posted in All about Veterans, vA news | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

BVA — HBV ≠ HCV NO MATTER WHO REPS YOU

 FROM THE HONORABLE

DAVID P. KORESH VARO

IN WHACKO, TEXAS

 

We saw this last year. Looks like they mimeographed the playbook and the decision was lifted verbatim. The Veterans Law Judge is running this down a cow chute with the HBV brand on it. There can be no talk of the horrible HCV symptoms the Veteran is suffering because they are not service connected. All the VLJ wants or needs to know is that the HBV that he had in service was acute and has now resolved. He no longer suffers from HBV and is now rated 0% for it because he does not have any compensable symptoms of HBV. He has previously been denied for HCV so we’re not talking inextricably intertwined. These are two entirely different viruses and two completely different etiologies.

Switching from Vietnam Veterans of America to the Disabled American Vets is not going to make a difference either. This claim is up on blocks and they’ve removed the axles. At any rate, this guy is toast. It’s called “push him off balance”. They split the difference. He had hep in service so we call that HBV and give him 0% for it. He had willful misconduct in service doing drugs so we don’t have to pay him for that flavor (HCV). Win-win. No CUE. I get a bonus and Last one to Willy’s Bar has to buy a round.

DAVID P.KORESH MEMORIAL VARO

Posted in BvA HCV decisions | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

BVA–TRICK OR TREAT FROM NEW JERSEY

Here’s a dandy just in time for All Hallows’ Eve. Our Johnny Newark had bad luck at the roulette tables in July. He rolled the dice back in 2001 for HCV and got it for 40%.  SMOKIN’! He obviously thought that was skinny so he filed his NOD. Incensed at his obstreperous behaviour, they opted to take his rating away entirely-and indeed did so in January 2006. Nonplussed, he went up to the Court and got it back in March 2008. So you can see there’s been a little head-butting already. Johnny–1, vA–0. vA just scored 2 and Johnny’s now behind. Since his rep. forgot to include it, vA isn’t even looking at TDIU either. That’s 3

Meanwhile, the prednisone and Imuran were kicking his kidneys hard. Next thing you know he says he has DM2 from the pills. The medrecs say something entirely different according to the BVA. They reflect that maybe he was, no, most definitely, coming down with it and positively had it 3 years before the filing. Okay? So what? When filing, you have to look at all theories of how the airplane crashed. Anyone with an ounce of knowledge in gastropathy is aware DM2 and HCV are frequent dance partners. Throw in any Interferon and I guarantee it with about a 55% probability.

Johnboy isn’t a doctor and neither is the New Jersey Department of Military and Veterans Affairs. To their credit, they did chase this HCV claim reversal  thing up to the Court and get a reversal of their own, so something eeeeeevil was afoot as usual. You don’t get many reversals at the Court. Remands are a dime a dozen but true reversals are rare. That implies the BVA and the RO were legally challenged and couldn’t bob for the apple without cheating.

This decision is a further example of playing tennis with the remand a few times and dragging the whole thing out like a childhood game of keep away. In the end, the animosity is so great, that the BVA decision on the DM2 purposefully goes off into a discussion not of secondary origin, but a minute inspection from 1972 forward on a direct basis. No consideration of anything of or having to do with correlation between HCV and DM2 but only in the limited context of prednisone equals DM2.  I think he has a shot at the DM2 on appeal as an unintended consequence of the pills.

So who’s fault is this? Looks like a traditional railroad job at first glance but who opened the gate and let the vA off the reservation? The boys down at the NJM&VA were repping him so someone there wrote it up. Unless they were word- challenged, this should have been straightforward  Of course, the vA should have been stand up guys and entertained all theories, too. That’s a faery tale so don’t waste your time chasing down that Hoodoo Lane.

No, the evidence seems to point back to the original grant of HCV during a transplant. They wanted this in the DC 7312 cirrhosis file and they don’t want to admit error. With 7312, they can get away with down rating him to 30% from his 40%. Ideally, he’d just die and solve the problem, too. When they reversed at the Court, this became a tennis ball. The RO has now been dissed. Anything they do in the future will be purposefully  defective out of spite and require a redo. Witness a remand for two years (expeditiously handled ?) to get to an up to date medical examination for this present denial of everything sought. Eleven years of Trick or Treat, Johnny. Thank you for your Service, Johnny. Here, Johnny. Have some more prednisone and Azathioprine on us, Johnny. Free.

The sad fact is Mr. Newark has a long road ahead on rough terrain. Getting rid of his headless horseman (the NJM&VA) and finding good legal help will be his next challenge. We wish him all the best for his next endeavour in the Hall of Mirrors.

Posted in BvA HCV decisions, Veterans Law | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

CAVC–JONES v. SHINSEKI-DIARRHEA vs LOOSE STOOLS

download (1)Here’s one I’m sure will have interesting implications for Veterans for some time. I’m not being humourous, either. David J. Jones finds himself in a holding pattern on the upwind leg and can’t seem to get tower clearance to land. The Secretary has taken it upon himself to reread the diagnostic codes and insert the beneficial, healing effects of antacids and other over-the-counter medications to artificially prevent moving up to a higher rating. The problem is that Uncle Eric expressly inserted language discussing medications in other diagnostic codes freely and neglected to insert it in Mr. Jones’ diagnostic code (7319 -irritable colon syndrome or ICS).  Nevertheless, we are instructed to assume it was contemplated all along.

I think what sets Jones apart from other decisions in this vein is the Secretary’s high handed  position that the Court has no business deciding anything to do with diagnostic codes period. Throwing the gauntlet down in front of the Court in such a fashion is bound to get a rise out of them and it certainly had the desired effect-albeit not what Eric had hoped for.

In response, the Secretary argues that the Court is precluded by statute from reviewing VA’s Schedule for Rating Disabilities. Secretary’s Br. at 14 (citing 38 U.S.C. § 7252(b)); Butts v. Brown, 5 Vet.App. 532, 539 (1993)). He also asserts that the rating criteria for IBS contemplate “whether the frequency or severity of . . . IBS symptoms were lessened or controlled with medication,” as the criteria “do not differentiate between a claimant’s condition with or without medication.”  Jones v. Shinseki (2012)

The above in blue is the vA “shape shifter” theory that expounds the “If we didn’t specifically mention it in the rating, that doesn’t mean we didn’t contemplate it. For the record, now that you have called us out on it, we did consider it. Just because we didn’t specifically discuss it is immaterial. You have to trust us when we say we considered it. We wrote it so we know what we meant.”

Consider also what you say to vA. In my book, I’ve made it clear that you have to be anally specific (pun intended) about what ails you and how you describe it or vA will turn it around against you. Here is a prime example that illustrates the technique.

The appellant also contends that the Board clearly erred when it determined that he did not suffer from diarrhea or, in the alternative, that it failed to provide an adequate statement of reasons or bases for that determination, as it did not explain why”loose bowel movements” did not constitute diarrhea for the purposes of the rating criteria for IBS.  In support of this argument, the appellant cites to several medical dictionaries, which define diarrhea as “‘abnormal frequency and liquidity of fecal discharges,'”  and “‘[a]n abnormally frequent discharge of semi-solid or fluid fecal matter from the bowel.”  He asserts that the medical examinations on which the Board relied are ambiguous at best and that the Board improperly discounted his lay testimony as to his symptoms.   Jones supra

vA  then goes into high gear and attempts to let the air out of Davey’s tires:

The Secretary responds that the Board did not clearly err, as the December 2009 VA opinion on which it relied stated that the appellant “‘has had loose stools that occasionally are prolonged periods of diarrhea.'” Similarly, he notes that, although VA treatment records note abdominal distress and loose bowel movements, they are negative for diarrhea and constipation.  Finally, the Secretary argues that the definitions of diarrhea proffered by the appellant require liquidity of bowel movements, as opposed to mere looseness.      Jones supra

downloadWell shoot, Davey. There you go with those “vague” definitions.  Loose is not diarrhea- not by a long shot where we come from. Besides, you only mentioned it about 40 times over the last 10 years.  That hardly sounds like 30%.  We at the vA are at a loss as to what to make of this. You suffer one thing and are trying to make it look much worse.  You’re asking us to jump you from $127.00/month up to $435.00/month on your definition of “diarrhea”?  That buys a lot of Depends® undergarments but we don’t think you need them, bubba.  If you planned out those potty breaks a little better, you wouldn’t suffer incontinence. And shoot, if it’s only occasionally, why, how can we pay you for something that only happens rarely?  There’s a lot of Vets in far worse shape than you and we don’t hear them complaining. (We wear earplugs!)

One thing everyone overlooks on these “examinations” is what the Veteran says and what the transcriber actually writes down. Thus you can see that when a soldier arrives at a Forward Triage Station and complains of severe pain from  several SFWs (shell fragment wounds) it sometimes turns into “Patient arrived with minor lacerations”. When you go to a vAMC and see Dr. Ahmed Fahmi declaring you often have “loose stools and diarrhea 8-10 times a day”, it’s easy to understand how “occasionally” slips in because Davey didn’t wave the “near-constant” flag. It appears Veterans need more medical training to clarify what it is they suffer from. The injudicious use of general terms without specifying exactly what is wrong is the problem. No flies on vA.

The Court’s take on whether it has the authority to address these weighty subjects is unequivocal. Succeeding vA Secretaries over the years continue to arrive with the assumption that their power over Vets is absolute and the Court’s authority is relegated to minor points of law. Erspamer was a delicious case in point. So was Manio.  Telling the Court they have no authority is one of the quickest ways I know of the get the bitchslap on both cheeks.

Initially, the Court rejects the Secretary’s terse contention that it lacks jurisdiction to reach the appellant’s arguments. Although the Secretary is correct that the Court lacks the authority to “review the schedule of ratings for disabilities adopted under [38 U.S.C. § 1155] or any action of the Secretary in adopting or revising that schedule,” 38 U.S.C. § 7252(b), that is not what the appellant asks the Court to do in the present case. Rather, the appellant challenges the Board’s application of DC 7319, arguing that it applied factors wholly outside that DC when rating his disability.   It is well settled that the Court has jurisdiction to review VA’s interpretation and application of its own regulations. See, e.g., Lane v. Principi, 339 F.3d 1331, 1339 (Fed. Cir. 2003) (holding that the “Court should review de novo the Board’s interpretation of a regulation”); Bradley v. Principi, 22 Vet.App. 280, 290 (2008). This power includes the ability to review the Board’s interpretation and application of a DC. See, e.g., Otero-Castro v. Principi, 16 Vet.App. 375, 380-82 (2002) (reviewing the Board’s interpretation and application of 38 C.F.R. § 4.104, DCs 7005, 7007 (2001)).   Jones supra

Imagine a man (or a woman) telling an accomplished mechanic that he doesn’t have a clue what he’s about under the hood. Further imagine a long diatribe by same about how knowledgeable they are on the subject and you can see the polite usage of the phrase “terse contention” above in red. Red is an apt color because it most closely describes what Judges Lance, Davis, and our newest, Pietsch, are seeing. We see this mistake over and over. Deference should be shown when approaching the bench. Belligerent, argumentative behaviour is all well and fine when denying justice to Vets and their hired guns but it must be reined in if the General Counsel wants to prevail. Fortunately for Vets, vA cannot teach its dogs new tricks. They had their way for over two hundred years and bad habits die hard. This time, the Court has decided to make it perfectly clear that they do not intend to hear another one of these.

Thus, to the extent that the Court did not explicitly hold in Otero-Castro that the Board may not deny entitlement to a higher rating on the basis of relief provided by medication when those effects are not specifically contemplated by the rating criteria, it does so today. This ensures that all similarly structured DCs are interpreted and operate in the same manner so that diagnostic criteria are applied consistently. Therefore, as DC 7319 is silent as to the effects of medication, the Board erred in denying entitlement to a higher disability rating based on the relief provided by the appellant’s anti-acid (sic) medication.  Jones supra

I can smell a new wave of proposed changes to the Diagnostic Codes in the wings. Watch what happens when they take aim at Interferon. I can hear it now. “Claimant knows full well  the deleterious effects of Interferon. Loss of eyesight, DM2, cryoglobulinemia, cognitive brain dysfunction, and RA are all to be expected as aftereffects and to request remuneration for them is simply not supported by any reading of Diagnostic Code 7354. By electing to submit to treatment, the Veteran knowingly gave his permission with the expectation that there might be a loss in the quality of life. To return asking for compensation under these circumstances is rude, crude, socially unattractive-not to mention boorish.”

We will continue to make headway in fits and gasps at the Court. This is one small step for Vetkind but represents much more. It repudiates the heretofore important precept that the VASEC holds sway over everything discussed in the diagnostic codes. He doesn’t. Or more concisely, his descriptions as written in Part Four of 38 CFR mean exactly what they say they do. Embellishing them to fit the circumstances is impermissible. Forty years ago we called this Mission Creep in the military. The vA has been employing it since the War of 1812.

TRUST US.

WE WROTE THE REGS.

Posted in CAVC Knowledge, CAVC ruling, CAVC/COVA Decision, Nexus Information, Veterans Law | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

BVA– ARE WE TALKING “BVA” IN DC? JETGUNS?

Read this jetgun decision and scratch your head. VLJ U.R. Powell is no spring chicken The good judge has had a vast wealth of experience denying claims and has indeed turned down hundreds, if not thousands, of claims just like this. Why then the rush, nay stampede, to the Veteran’s side and a reversal of the “probative” nexus of the vA examiner? This decision makes no sense unless the Vet is a blood relative or promises were made and gifts were exchanged in the parking garage.  I have read literally tens of thousands of these and have seen only one other that beggars the imagination.

 

Yep. A real, honest to God, clean, jetgun win with no hassles, and no benefit of the doubt.  Simply amazing.

Posted in BvA HCV decisions, Jetgun BvA Decisions, Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

BVA–GET ‘EM WHILE THEY’RE HOT- NEW DECISIONS FOR FALL 2012

Here’s the latest release of new HCV decisions for Fall 2012. They are dated from April forward. vA only releases the first 400 of each batch whereas before you could research each and every one of them. Now why is that?

Posted in BvA HCV decisions | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

FOOTLOCKER– $35/OZ. GOLD/602 FS (C)

Remember tanking up on this stuff when you DEROSed in 196_? Thirty five dollars would buy you a worked gold chain (24 karat). I had four one oz. and one 10 oz. giving me cervical distress when I came back. We used to carry them to barter our freedom if we ever found ourselves in Indian Country without a ride home.  I managed to hold on to one of them. The medal is a figure of a very holy Buddhist Priest rather than Buddha himself. I had 9 of these when I left but have misplaced them over the years. They were reputed to deflect bullets and hold off ghosts.  During a financial tight spot in 77, I sold the 10 oz. chain for what might be now considered pennies on the dollar.

Jumping out of a 123 in August 1970, I kicked this Zippo knockoff (a Zeus) out of the dirt on the parking apron near the AOC at Long Tieng.  It says  602 FS (C)  and Udorn AB Thailand. Turns out the 602 Fighter Squadron (Commando) was stationed at Udorn RTAFB and later at NKP (Nakhon Phanom RTAFB). God only know how long it lay there at Long Tieng before I found it. It had lost its chrome finish by the time I discovered it. Since Ronson lighter fluid was in short supply, we usually refueled with 130 AVGAS or JP-4.  If anyone is or knows a former member of the 602 feel free to tell them I have a free lighter that needs a chrome job. It works fine.

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vA–HOPE AS A STRATEGY

Member Danielle writes of her Adventures in VSOland…

Dear Nod,

We had our third visit with my husbands new SO at the DAV on Tuesday and Im worried . He doesn’t seem to understand that my husband is not in good health. We filed for Hepatitis C again because he got to sick to work. We didnt get the forms filled out on time in 2006. The VFW SO  didnt  call us either so we lost out on the 2002 claiming. Thats not why Im writing. ____, this new SO is kind of wishywashy. He said he hopes we get a good C&P doctor at QTC and they write it up for having combat blood exposure. I just came to this site  Google and I see the nexus bible thing. We read it together last night an it sounds like a brick wall. If the VA is doing the C&P, how do you do a private nexus? Were broke. We got Medicaid and thats whos paying for this now. He did the peginton  drugs for 40 weeks and it came right back. The SO says he hopes my husband’s records are all there. Doesnt he look at the Central file if he has our attorney power.  How do we get a copy of his records.  ____ said he’d talk to his supervisor about the records but we should not try to get them while they are doing the claim. Frank says we should start over. What do we do.

Danielle (myreal name)

I would ask you to read everything on the site here, Danielle.  Start with the introduction and tips and tricks. You don’t have to do all the legal cases. But most importantly, I would lay out some serious questions for you to ask your Service officer. It sounds as if you have a robo-server who is a remote conduit to the supervisor with the knowledge. Now you have a filter in between that does not give you real time information. Without you medical records, you cannot do anything effectively to come up with a true, unbiased nexus. Without reviewing the record, I can almost guarantee you will be denied again on this. You mention a 2002-2006 claim and do not say what they denied it on. If you have not found something new to submit (like a nexus letter) they may just deny it before it leaves the station. It sounds like your present DAV SO “hopes” a lot of things fall into place. He obviously thinks as many do that the VA is your best friend. Only 15% of Vets who file claims feel that way-eventually- after they win. Some fight for many more years to get the proper amount they are due. Few of the Vets we have helped here will sing the praises of the veterans Administration. Kumbaya, my Lord is not a winning game plan.

Ask to speak to ____’s supervisor directly and deal with him/her. Every extra cog in a wheel is useless and an opportunity for an error. Use the information you find here to question the supervisor about a game plan. I realize for many, it is a maze of paper forms and confusion. After you understand the process better you will see some of the method to the madness. You can ask questions without anyone telling you “somebody already asked that last week”. Remember- we were all blind at one time on this. It took me 18 years to “get it”.

Due to the backlog and depending on how recently you filed, getting your medical records and anything else you can find in St. Louis at the National Personnel Records Center will not hold up your claim. If you have your files from the 2002-2006, scan them and attach them to an email and I can at least tell you how to develop a game plan while you’re waiting. If you want to protect the private info, go ahead but I already have plenty of extra IDs and four condos in Mexico so I’m set.

Hope is not a strategy to win with. The vA is not your BFF, either. I don’t care what the DAV  or _____ told you.  You need responsible help, not a mailman. You need real legal input based on your circumstances but the vA deprives you of that avenue until you lose. We are not a substitute for real legal help but are more informative than the DAV is currently being with you. To be brutally honest, you stand a good chance of losing a few teeth before you get a win. We try to provide you with a mouth guard.  I know some of what you will read here seems way over your head. On the right hand side are categories of things we deal with. Starting out is the hardest part of any journey. The widgets you see at the top under the Vietnam Service Medal are paths to the tools you may need to win with. They also give you the actual forms VA prefers you to use.  Feel free to be a bull in a china shop here. You won’t break anything or be criticized. Your husband earned what he seeks. You just need the key to the door and the secret password. I’d like to think we have both or can direct you to the ones who do.

A wise Chinaman probably came up with “A journey of a thousand miles begins with the first step”. Around here it starts with a Form 21-526 and a request to St. Louis. Good luck to you and Frank. Your success quotient just went up dramatically when you went to Google. If you have Kindle, download my book for $3.99 at Amazon. If not, Barnes and Noble have a paperback for less than $15. It will give you a lot of the basic information to get going without trying to turn you into a lawyer.

Sincerely,

Nodster

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FACEBOOK POLITICS

My facebook page is a reflection of this column I write. Some put their brand of humor there to share with me, too. This I could not resist.

We don’t do politics or religion but this expresses what some feel about life and people. I move it here for its resonance in the next several weeks. I am blessed and am not starving. It appears Gov. Romney is very, very blessed  and he and his wife apparently give millions away to charity every year. This is what is important. To give is more blessed than to receive and I practice that every waking moment. I find it abhorent that anyone would cast aspersions on another for their success in life. Some work for it. Some inherit it and some just win the lotto. I don’t care. It’s what you do with it after you get it that speaks volumes. And that’s all I’m going to say about that.

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