RockyPilot
Filing Flight Plan
- Joined
- Jul 28, 2023
- Messages
- 5
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RockyPilot
A little dramatic in the title, but after hearing my story you might understand. I am a pilot in the military and in 2018 I reported to medical with some issues. I was told nothing was wrong and sent on my way. This occurred every 4-6 months until 2020 when I was diagnosed with depression. I went through counseling with minor success, but my mental and physical symptoms continued. In 2022 I finally said enough is enough when I started having heart palpitations, tightness in my chest, muscle fatigue, joint pain, and continuing mental health struggles. Medical placed me on sertraline (zoloft) to treat my “depression” and ultimately I had side effects to include a suicidal ideation. At that moment I took myself off the medication and the military decided I was going to be medically discharged due to mental health. Two months after the med sep process began, it was discovered that I had hypothyroidism. And after going on the medication for that, ALL of my symptoms both mental and physical went away.
I went to my AME and have been working through the process and my medical application is at the federal air surgeon office likely getting adjudicated around the holiday season. I am still being medically separated from the military on mental health despite attempts to correct their error. My VA disability is at 100% which is largely because each of my symptoms were diagnosed individually. Now, my military treating psychiatrist stated in writing that they retracted their depression diagnosis of me in favor of the hypothyroid diagnosis (this exact misdiagnosis is common). And the HIMS AME report states they have no mental or aeromedical concerns, but thinks that the hypothyroidism and depression exist as a comorbidity. My primary military physician has written a letter stating that with proper thyroid treatment there are no mental health concerns. For me it is genetic, as my Father has been on thyroid medication for 30 years (why he didn’t tell me is a separate issue and irrelevant).
Seems like I have done all I can, but honestly what do you think my chances are of getting my medical back? It’s scary that the SSRI use and the suicidal ideation exist, and I really hope the military medical mistake has not wrecked my career.
I went to my AME and have been working through the process and my medical application is at the federal air surgeon office likely getting adjudicated around the holiday season. I am still being medically separated from the military on mental health despite attempts to correct their error. My VA disability is at 100% which is largely because each of my symptoms were diagnosed individually. Now, my military treating psychiatrist stated in writing that they retracted their depression diagnosis of me in favor of the hypothyroid diagnosis (this exact misdiagnosis is common). And the HIMS AME report states they have no mental or aeromedical concerns, but thinks that the hypothyroidism and depression exist as a comorbidity. My primary military physician has written a letter stating that with proper thyroid treatment there are no mental health concerns. For me it is genetic, as my Father has been on thyroid medication for 30 years (why he didn’t tell me is a separate issue and irrelevant).
Seems like I have done all I can, but honestly what do you think my chances are of getting my medical back? It’s scary that the SSRI use and the suicidal ideation exist, and I really hope the military medical mistake has not wrecked my career.