Army · Weapons / Security / Law Enforcement
This profile summarizes the typical exposure environment, common VA disability claim signals, evidence to gather, and C&P exam preparation notes for veterans who served as a Army Military Police Officer (AOC 31A). It is a discovery reference — not a diagnosis, not a claim filing, and not legal advice.
The exposure environment most commonly associated with this role is weapons qualification, ranges, detainee/security operations, among others. These exposures map to specific VA presumptive frameworks, audiology criteria, and musculoskeletal rating doctrine described under 38 C.F.R. Parts 3 and 4.
Veterans in this role frequently file or receive evaluations for the following service-connected conditions. This list is not exhaustive and does not replace a personal medical evaluation.
The following secondary conditions warrant review when the underlying primary condition is service-connected.
The following records are typically the most probative evidence to support claims for veterans in this occupational specialty. FOIA requests for service treatment records, personnel records, and unit-level documentation should be prioritized before filing.
Document weapons exposure, shift work, traumatic events, physical altercations, body armor, and chronic MSK/mental health symptoms.
Bring documentation that establishes frequency, severity, and chronicity of symptoms. Examiners record what they observe — being clear, factual, and complete about how the condition affects daily life is essential.
38 CFR § 4.87 DC 6260 — Tinnitus. 10%: Recurrent tinnitus. This is both the minimum and maximum schedular rating. Smith v. Nicholson, 451 F.3d 1344 (Fed. Cir. 2006) confirmed that 10% is the maximum regardless of whether tinnitus is unilateral or bilateral. Tinnitus is the single…
38 CFR § 3.304(f) — PTSD Service Connection and MST. Requires: DSM-5 diagnosis per § 4.125(a), medical nexus to in-service stressor, and credible stressor evidence. Five stressor-specific provisions: (f)(2) combat veterans — lay testimony alone under 38 U.S.C. § 1154(b). (f)(3) f…
Public Law 117-168 — PACT Act (Promise to Address Comprehensive Toxics Act, signed August 10, 2022). Expands VA healthcare and benefits for veterans exposed to toxic substances. Key provisions: Burn pit exposure (post-9/11 SW Asia/Afghanistan): concedes toxic exposure for all vet…
38 CFR § 4.124a DC 8045 — Traumatic Brain Injury. Revised effective October 23, 2008. TBI uses a unique 10-facet evaluation system across three dysfunction areas: cognitive impairment, emotional/behavioral dysfunction, and physical dysfunction. The 10 facets evaluate: (1) Memory/…
Citations updated when 38 C.F.R. or M21-1 doctrine changes.
Public-source core occupation. Validate current status before production deployment.
Other roles with the most similar exposure profile, computed from the 6-axis exposure vector — not just career family.