S
Superfortress90
Guest
My original medical was deferred due to an OCD diagnosis a few years ago. I took SSRIs which were found to be ineffective. Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) was recommended, and with some lifestyle changes OCD tendencies went into remission.
I've had no "symptoms" for a couple of years now, and thus haven't undergone any treatment since.
I retained an experienced AME/HIMS AME (at several hundred an hour) to support me through the process after the examination resulted in deferral. The FAA request for records came about a month later requesting the following:
Since I wasn't actually undergoing treatment and hadn't been for a couple of years, I had no current "treating psychiatrist". The psychiatrist I had visited was through Kaiser Permanente, a HMO health insurance plan that I no longer had (I switched employers in the couple of years since treatment). I could not even message her without switching back to Kaiser. I did end up getting a very brief letter that I had to pick up in person by getting the Kaiser Permanente secretary to forward a message to her. The process took like a month and resulted in a very brief letter letter from the psychiatrist that simply outlined the date of treatment and stated that my condition was not in any way disabling at that time. She noted that she had not seen me in a few years and thus could not comment on my current condition.
Additionally, I visited my primary care provider and obtained a letter outlining the treatment that took place a few years prior. The letter indicated that I was no longer taking medication, that my condition was completely stable and did not require additional visits and that my original conditional was not in any way disabling, that I had treated the condition successfully via Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT), that the diagnosis was for OCD not depression (SSRIs are sometimes used for both), and that in his professional opinion I could move forward with certification.
I addition to those documents, the "consultant" AME I hired suggested I write a personal statement outlining my history with OCD and subsequent treatment. He suggested that my case was extremely straightforward and that while issuance was not guaranteed, he did not foresee any circumstance under which a denial would occur. I sent those three documents to the FAA.
Today, two months later, I received a response. To my extreme surprise, I received a denial:
I'm a bit puzzled, but the last sentence of the first paragraph seems to suggest they think I am still undergoing therapy (which I'm not).
How shall I proceed? I'm thinking of simply sending them a letter stating that they misunderstood and that I am not currently undergoing treatment.
I've had no "symptoms" for a couple of years now, and thus haven't undergone any treatment since.
I retained an experienced AME/HIMS AME (at several hundred an hour) to support me through the process after the examination resulted in deferral. The FAA request for records came about a month later requesting the following:
"A current status report from your treating psychiatrist regarding your history of OCD. The report should address history and symptoms, diagnosis, functional capacity, treatment plan, current over-the-counter and prescription medications, and prognosis. Include the results of any current testing deemed appropriate."
Since I wasn't actually undergoing treatment and hadn't been for a couple of years, I had no current "treating psychiatrist". The psychiatrist I had visited was through Kaiser Permanente, a HMO health insurance plan that I no longer had (I switched employers in the couple of years since treatment). I could not even message her without switching back to Kaiser. I did end up getting a very brief letter that I had to pick up in person by getting the Kaiser Permanente secretary to forward a message to her. The process took like a month and resulted in a very brief letter letter from the psychiatrist that simply outlined the date of treatment and stated that my condition was not in any way disabling at that time. She noted that she had not seen me in a few years and thus could not comment on my current condition.
Additionally, I visited my primary care provider and obtained a letter outlining the treatment that took place a few years prior. The letter indicated that I was no longer taking medication, that my condition was completely stable and did not require additional visits and that my original conditional was not in any way disabling, that I had treated the condition successfully via Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT), that the diagnosis was for OCD not depression (SSRIs are sometimes used for both), and that in his professional opinion I could move forward with certification.
I addition to those documents, the "consultant" AME I hired suggested I write a personal statement outlining my history with OCD and subsequent treatment. He suggested that my case was extremely straightforward and that while issuance was not guaranteed, he did not foresee any circumstance under which a denial would occur. I sent those three documents to the FAA.
Today, two months later, I received a response. To my extreme surprise, I received a denial:
I'm a bit puzzled, but the last sentence of the first paragraph seems to suggest they think I am still undergoing therapy (which I'm not).
How shall I proceed? I'm thinking of simply sending them a letter stating that they misunderstood and that I am not currently undergoing treatment.