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Impacted for childbearing? Absolutely. Impacted for her military role? Much harder to argue that. In fact, at the risk of getting flamed, lost duty time for pregnancy and whatever symptoms prompted the medical justification for the procedure could suggest an overall benefit to duty time.
But to automatically give 30% regardless of military impact just made me scratch my head.
My wife is a retired Captain, Navy Nurse Corps. This question comes up fairly often in conversation. the question is not: did this disease/condition happen while on active duty? but: did the conditions of service likely cause this injury? Including ovarian cancers & conditions leading to hysterectomies.
Military personnel are exposed to any number of hormone disrupting & endocrine disrupting chemicals, often before we know they are dangerous. Brain cancers, breast cancers, testicular cancers, ovarian cancers. The epi-genetic links that some of these chemicals trigger in gene expression are just now being understood.
Maintainers use exotic solvents, firefighters are exposed to toxic fire suppression chemicals (which we now known are "forever chemicals" polluting soil on bases around the world--and aboard ship. On a ship, every sailor is a firefighter), the fuel powering jet engine emergency APUs is often the highly toxic & gene reacting hydrozine. Jet fuel handlers & line personnel are exposed to special additives in fuels. Female Vietnam vets working in medical on base in rear areas were still exposed to the hormone-disrupting agent orange in drinking water & on the clothing of wounded. In more modern times, toxic smoke from burn pits affect the endocrine systems of everyone on base, regardless of assignment. Printshop solvents used to clean equipment is particularly toxic to women.
E2 Hawkeye pilots--men & women--,we know now, have higher lifetime rates of cancers from sitting just forward of a powerful radar (sailors working in the fuselage under the radome were more protected). Radiomen & flight line personnel participate in impromptu microwave cooking demonstrations when hoisted aloft Next to improperly secured radar antennas or walking out in front of a jet who left their radar on while taxiing.
the list is endless.
Again, the question is not: is a hysterectomy a cause for a disability claim, but did conditions of military service likely cause or hasten the condition that brought on the need for a hysterectomy? Or an orchidectomy (removed diseased testicles).