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 Ammunition Stock Control and Accounting Specialist (MOS 89A). 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…
38 CFR §§ 4.85-4.86 DC 6100 — Hearing Loss. Rated through a purely mechanical formula: controlled speech discrimination testing (Maryland CNC) and puretone audiometry produce Roman numeral designations (I-XI) via Table VI. The two ears designations are cross-referenced in Table V…
§ 4.129 Mental disorders due to traumatic stress. When a mental disorder that develops in service as a result of a highly stressful event is severe enough to bring about the veteran's release from active military service, the rating agency shall assign an evaluation of not less t…
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.