Posted on Aug 9, 2016
8 Ways To Improve Your VA Disability Claim
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Thanks for sharing SFC Joe S. Davis Jr., MSM, DSL
Here are the eight steps you can take to improve your VA claim. There is some helpful information here but the author seems focused on having the reader get his book. I have put some comments in [brackets].
1. The veteran has to “see the solution.” The VA may be the problem, but Congress isn’t the solution. The VA isn’t the solution. You are the solution. [simplistic not very helpful to those who have been doing what the VA asked them to do and still have not seen progress.]
2. Get your VA C-file.
3. Learn the law. You don’t need to become a lawyer, but you do need to understand some of the basic laws of a VA disability claim or appeal. There are ten cases that I think every veteran should know to help your VA disability claim.
4. Build the four pillars. Four pillars need to be built in nearly every VA disability claim for service connection. These are: eligibility, service connection, impairment rating, and effective date. The most important pillar is service connection.
5. Use five-star evidence. ... I believe that to successfully prove your claim, you will need to learn, and use, five-star evidence, or evidence that is material, probative, relevant, competent and credible.
6. Choose the battlefield. Many veterans think of the VA claims process as a “hamster wheel” — an endless circle of claims, denials, and remands that never really gets them anywhere. [Your congressman or woman can be a great help to resolve logjams if you have sufficient evidence to provide a case.]
7. Get help. Not everyone likes to change their own oil. And for some folks, removing and cleaning the carburetor on a motorcycle is an impossible task. [Use one of the Veteran Service Organizations such as American Legion, DAV, and VFW]
8. Protect your survivors and dependents. Preparing your claim for your survivor’s dependency and indemnity compensation claim or accrued benefits claim is something that you can start doing now. Believe me, it will make it much easier for your surviving spouse to recover compensation or benefits [than] if the VA does not grant your claim before you pass away.
Here are the eight steps you can take to improve your VA claim. There is some helpful information here but the author seems focused on having the reader get his book. I have put some comments in [brackets].
1. The veteran has to “see the solution.” The VA may be the problem, but Congress isn’t the solution. The VA isn’t the solution. You are the solution. [simplistic not very helpful to those who have been doing what the VA asked them to do and still have not seen progress.]
2. Get your VA C-file.
3. Learn the law. You don’t need to become a lawyer, but you do need to understand some of the basic laws of a VA disability claim or appeal. There are ten cases that I think every veteran should know to help your VA disability claim.
4. Build the four pillars. Four pillars need to be built in nearly every VA disability claim for service connection. These are: eligibility, service connection, impairment rating, and effective date. The most important pillar is service connection.
5. Use five-star evidence. ... I believe that to successfully prove your claim, you will need to learn, and use, five-star evidence, or evidence that is material, probative, relevant, competent and credible.
6. Choose the battlefield. Many veterans think of the VA claims process as a “hamster wheel” — an endless circle of claims, denials, and remands that never really gets them anywhere. [Your congressman or woman can be a great help to resolve logjams if you have sufficient evidence to provide a case.]
7. Get help. Not everyone likes to change their own oil. And for some folks, removing and cleaning the carburetor on a motorcycle is an impossible task. [Use one of the Veteran Service Organizations such as American Legion, DAV, and VFW]
8. Protect your survivors and dependents. Preparing your claim for your survivor’s dependency and indemnity compensation claim or accrued benefits claim is something that you can start doing now. Believe me, it will make it much easier for your surviving spouse to recover compensation or benefits [than] if the VA does not grant your claim before you pass away.
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SFC Joe S. Davis Jr., MSM, DSL
Awesome sauce! Great info and thank you so much for sharing! This gives me some hope for myself as I plan on filing a couple of new claims.
Awesome sauce! Great info and thank you so much for sharing! This gives me some hope for myself as I plan on filing a couple of new claims.
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Always good stuff SFC Joe S. Davis Jr., MSM, DSL. It wont help me anymore as I'm 100% certifiable but there are lots out there who can use this info.
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