OregonDucks609
Pre-Flight
- Joined
- May 9, 2022
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- 47
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OregonDucks609
Hi all - thanks for all the help thus far. My psychiatrist, who originally treated me for situational depression over a year ago, responded to my email showing him what the FAA requested in their letter to me and told me that he is "not able to assist me with the FAA letter." For context, this was the initial letter sent by the FAA asking me for records after I was deferred by my AME. I was hoping to get in to see him to fulfill the FAA request of doing the clinical examination, which would then allow him to write the letter (I was going to help with that process as much as possible to save him time). Specifically, the FAA requested "a current history and clinical examination from a physician regarding your history of situational depression. The report should be type-written on physician letter and must include..." and then goes on to list things such as diagnosis, mental health history, symptoms, treatment plan, prognosis, etc. I'm at a loss that my doctor won't work with me on this, although I do understand it's a lot to ask of a busy person. Also, to be clear, I firmly believe this is a bandwidth thing and not that he is unwilling to "sign off" or assist me in becoming a pilot due to safety concern or something like that. Any suggestions on best approach going forward? Can I find an FAA-familiar psychiatrist to review my records and perform the clinical examination to create this report? Does it have to be a psychiatrist (the letter simply says "from a physician" and does not specify what kind)? This was a roadblock I was not expecting, but I feel confident that someone on here has dealt with uncooperative docs before.