Navy · Armor / Field Artillery / Air Defense
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 Navy Naval Aircrewman Helicopter (Rating AWS). 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 large-caliber weapons, turret/crew-served weapons, blast overpressure, 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 platform type, firing frequency, blast proximity, headset/hearing protection limits, vibration exposure, and chronic joint/spine 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 §§ 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…
§ 3.385 Disability due to impaired hearing. For the purposes of applying the laws administered by VA, impaired hearing will be considered to be a disability when the auditory threshold in any of the frequencies 500, 1000, 2000, 3000, 4000 Hertz is 40 decibels or greater; or when …
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.