Posted on Jun 23, 2021
Can having hyperhydrosis (extremely sweaty hands and feet) in the military result in a discharge?
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I understand it a disqualification at entry but if diagnosed after you’ve already been in could it result in a medical discharge?
Posted >1 y ago
Responses: 5
Only if it interferes with you doing your job. But there are plenty of treatments for it to make it manageable.
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I'm not expert but if someone is looking to get out of the military for it they shouldn't have joined in the first place.
That condition would assume the excessive sweat happens most of the time not as the normal result of anxiety or extreme heat for example.
That condition would assume the excessive sweat happens most of the time not as the normal result of anxiety or extreme heat for example.
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MAJ Byron Oyler I am not just don’t want to try and get help with it and have it impact my career or job
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A1C Johnny Le
SPC Brian Mason oh the dry heat. CPL (Join to see) could this be due to weather or humidity?
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A1C Johnny Le no it’s under any weather condition even worse in the cold because the moisture makes my hands even colder
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