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Thank you for the all the information!
What qualifies as SEH?
I wonder if I can change my goal towards the end in case I specialize (many dental residencies charge tuition).
I have 6 months of Ch33 left. But it's a 3 year residency so I guess it can offset costs the first year IF I can use them...
I have 6 months of Ch33 left. But it's a 3 year residency so I guess it can offset costs the first year IF I can use them...
By graduation I will have used 30 months of CH33 and 40 months of CH31. Thats a great idea though. Thank you!Use the first few months, then apply for Voc rehab and see what happens. Maybe if you're already doing something for gainful employment, an extra 12 months could help... even if you manage to just secure the stipend or BAH at that point. Worst they can say is no, and anything is better than nothing.
I agree. I will be well past the 48 months when I graduate, I would just rather not take out the loans because the tuition for residency is like $50K a year, without living expenses.
26 months would be AWESOME for you. That's a huge offset.
By graduation I will have used 30 months of CH33 and 40 months of CH31. Thats a great idea though. Thank you!
I used 33 for 30months (mostly on AD), and was approved for 31 for 40 months. I'm at 80%.Did you use G.I. Bill for that long before using 31? If so, were you in 31 for 40 months beyond your G.I. Bill use, or is it 40 months total?
If you were in 33 for that long plus the 40 months of 31, you're well past the 48 month limit
ALCON-
Just got word that my Chapter 31 benefits were approved for my medical education in it's entirety. Pretty exciting.
I apologize if this is redundant, but here is everything I brought to my initial 'counseling', which lasted maybe an hour. When preparing, I adopted the mindset of essentially doing my officer's job for them, and not giving them the option to say 'no' or provide alternatives:
I think one of the most important pieces of information I gleaned from reading up on chapter 31 benefits was, "employment in line with the veteran's skills, aptitudes and interests." I'm not sure how many times I said something to the effect of, "I'm not interested in that" or "that would crush my soul." haha.
- acceptance letter
- undergrad transcript
- JST transcript
- disability rating form
- DD 214
- online skills assessment
- RNI form
- degree plan/timeline from the school (pulled from school's website)
- tuition information/estimate (pulled from school's website)
- three job listings from BLS which require medical degree
- an intelligent defense of why my SCDs prohibit entry level employment, and how SCDs will not be an issue after degree completion
Also, I placed an emphasis on the leadership role of a physician; arguably, the military gave us all some sort of leadership training, which not only distinguishes us from most other applicants, but it serves as another talking point as to why becoming a physician capitalizes on previous military training. My two cents.
If you have any questions, don't hesitate to PM me. I'm all about vets getting where they want to go.
I might see them giving you the full 48 months of benefits (so 12 more months), but I can't see those granting a Serious Employment Handicap (SEH) or at more than 10% which would make it unlikely.I have 14 days of Ch 33 left. Is it even worth trying to get a rating to apply for Ch 31? Tinnitus and minor hearing loss would be the only problems I could claim without lying. So I think I could get 10%.
Have you considered the enlisted to doctor program? I know I have a friend who is going through that right now. It's a rigorous selection, but it was worth it for him: EMDP2- Uniformed Services UniversityI'm enlisted now and intend to put in a package for a commission down the road. I'm afraid that attempting to get a rating might come back to bite me in the ass so I don't think I'll do it.
I've heard about it but it wouldn't benefit me much. I already have a bachelor's, master's, MCAT, and I'm applying this cycle. The program would make me more competitive but it would delay matriculation two years and I'd like to graduate med school before age 70. ☕Have you considered the enlisted to doctor program? I know I have a friend who is going through that right now. It's a rigorous selection, but it was worth it for him: EMDP2- Uniformed Services University
Understood 100%. Plus, this way you get to pick your specialty instead of Primary care and maaaybe something else if you're really lucky.I've heard about it but it wouldn't benefit me much. I already have a bachelor's, master's, MCAT, and I'm applying this cycle. The program would make me more competitive but it would delay matriculation two years and I'd like to graduate med school before age 70. ☕
I was talking with some military residents last night who said specializing through the army was arguably easier/less competitive. alternatively, emergency medicine is the most competitive specialty in the military match. This was all unverified mouth data, of course.Understood 100%. Plus, this way you get to pick your specialty instead of Primary care and maaaybe something else if you're really lucky.
Hello all,
Thank you for this wealth of information! I have some very specific questions for my particular situation.
OBJ: Medical school.
Situation:
*Active duty 2008-2016 as a Marine Raider (CSO). Wondering how to describe this for interests/abilites/experience. Looking to maximize chances of VRE acceptance. Any SEALs/GBs or other former SOF on here that have been through the process?
*Honorable discharge with 100% disability rating. Mostly joint mobility/pain with some nerve impairment and sleep apnea. Does this matter/help?
*Currently employed full time in an office. Can this negatively affect eligibility for Chapter 31? I will stop working once I gain B.S., complete pre reqs, and begin studying for the MCATs.
*Currently attending evening school full time with GI Bill/Yellow Ribbon to get a fast BA. By the end of degree, I will have 18 months left on Post 9/11 GI Bill
*I will still need 1 year of med school pre-reqs after my BA (9 months of Post 9/11 GI Bill)
*At pre req completion I will have 9 months left on Post 9/11 GI Bill, at which point I plan to submit a request for VRE. Is there good reason to make the switch now, or potentially while I am working on pre reqs?
Thanks for the help!
Hello all,
Thank you for this wealth of information! I have some very specific questions for my particular situation.
OBJ: Medical school.
Situation:
*Active duty 2008-2016 as a Marine Raider (CSO). Wondering how to describe this for interests/abilites/experience. Looking to maximize chances of VRE acceptance. Any SEALs/GBs or other former SOF on here that have been through the process?
*Honorable discharge with 100% disability rating. Mostly joint mobility/pain with some nerve impairment and sleep apnea. Does this matter/help?
*Currently employed full time in an office. Can this negatively affect eligibility for Chapter 31? I will stop working once I gain B.S., complete pre reqs, and begin studying for the MCATs.
*Currently attending evening school full time with GI Bill/Yellow Ribbon to get a fast BA. By the end of degree, I will have 18 months left on Post 9/11 GI Bill
*I will still need 1 year of med school pre-reqs after my BA (9 months of Post 9/11 GI Bill)
*At pre req completion I will have 9 months left on Post 9/11 GI Bill, at which point I plan to submit a request for VRE. Is there good reason to make the switch now, or potentially while I am working on pre reqs?
Thanks for the help!
Quick question here for you guys. Since VRE provides training for entry level position in the approved field, what position would that be for an MD? Would the official name on the approval form be "resident"? If so, what should we be putting down as an employment goal? Physician, MD, resident?
Quick question here for you guys. Since VRE provides training for entry level position in the approved field, what position would that be for an MD? Would the official name on the approval form be "resident"? If so, what should we be putting down as an employment goal? Physician, MD, resident?
Yep, mine simply states physician, which in turn requires an MD/DO degree.
The VA is paying your tuition, and you have some income from BAH+whatever your rating is. That, plus some COA loans should be plenty! If not, I don't think there's a rule against taking out loans as if you were paying tuition, and putting that toward something else, but im not sure about that.I'm a senior pre-med student. I've been finishing up my degree with Voc Rehab for the last two semesters and have already signed my academic agreement for them to pay for medical school. So I'm another one of those "it's possible". You guys seems to be the subject matter experts so I thought I'd ask:
Do you know how easily these contracts transfer to other states in the event that I don't get into Utah's only state school? Utah has a weird cultural component where everyone needs to become doctors/dentists so our med school gets an abnormally large amount of applications:seats. I see myself as being very competitive, but I'm just working on back up plans just in case.
Second, like most of you I'm a non-traditional student. I have a wife and 2 small kids and will be 30 when med school starts. How are some of you making ends meet? Obviously the BAH and my disability helps but we're kind of scraping by as it is. I know if I go to school with Voc Rehab that my family won't starve to death, but I worry about my wife being stuck at home with two kids because we can't afford for her to do anything with our kids. I've been reading up on financial aid and it seems that ever since the housing crash, schools have shrunk their Coast of Attendance making it pretty impossible to get enough money for a small family. Thoughts? Is it possible that BAH doesn't affect CoA which would allow me to borrow a little extra?
Thanks guys.
The VA is paying your tuition, and you have some income from BAH+whatever your rating is. That, plus some COA loans should be plenty! If not, I don't think there's a rule against taking out loans as if you were paying tuition, and putting that toward something else, but im not sure about that.
I'm a senior pre-med student. I've been finishing up my degree with Voc Rehab for the last two semesters and have already signed my academic agreement for them to pay for medical school. So I'm another one of those "it's possible". You guys seems to be the subject matter experts so I thought I'd ask:
Do you know how easily these contracts transfer to other states in the event that I don't get into Utah's only state school? Utah has a weird cultural component where everyone needs to become doctors/dentists so our med school gets an abnormally large amount of applications:seats. I see myself as being very competitive, but I'm just working on back up plans just in case.
Second, like most of you I'm a non-traditional student. I have a wife and 2 small kids and will be 30 when med school starts. How are some of you making ends meet? Obviously the BAH and my disability helps but we're kind of scraping by as it is. I know if I go to school with Voc Rehab that my family won't starve to death, but I worry about my wife being stuck at home with two kids because we can't afford for her to do anything with our kids. I've been reading up on financial aid and it seems that ever since the housing crash, schools have shrunk their Coast of Attendance making it pretty impossible to get enough money for a small family. Thoughts? Is it possible that BAH doesn't affect CoA which would allow me to borrow a little extra?
Thanks guys.
The VA is paying your tuition, and you have some income from BAH+whatever your rating is. That, plus some COA loans should be plenty! If not, I don't think there's a rule against taking out loans as if you were paying tuition, and putting that toward something else, but im not sure about that.
Looking at my local state school: tuition is $38,000 and room & board is $10,000 and the CoA is $60,000. So basically even if my BAH erases all $10,000 for room and board and my tuition portion is gone because of my Voc rehab support... I could still borrow up to $12,000 each year but it’s up to me to obviously spend that appropriately. Can any verify this?
Second, like most of you I'm a non-traditional student. I have a wife and 2 small kids and will be 30 when med school starts. How are some of you making ends meet?
Here’s one for all of you... has anybody looked into the national guard MDSSP program while receiving your VA disability? I know that with VA disability you can be in the guard, you just can’t receive your disability on days where you also drilled. My question is based on the fact that while in school most financial support from the scholarship comes from the stipend, not drill pay. You are getting a general stipend for a future work obligation. I also know that you also tend to drill 6-12 weekends/yr while on the scholarship so obviously you would have to forfeit that drill pay. I’m just not sure about the stipend portion. I’ve sought out a NG MDSSP recruiter but can’t seem to get a response. Any info?
Since the law is that you can't receive VA disability compensation for days spent on active duty (MUTAs count), I would assume that the stipend is not affected. When you fill out your VA-8951 for the fiscal year they only ask for total training days, not amount of money you got paid by the National Guard. Plus, these days DEERs is automatically alerting the VA to the number of days your drilled, and that's how they calculate it.
Definitely not a recruiter or authoritative voice in the matter, just my interpretation.
Yeah so I got some good info that lead me down the right rabbit hole. I have actually misunderstood how the CoA works. I do know that my BAH reduces my “room” portion of the room&board. I don’t know by how much but it’s not a ton. I was under the assumption that any income cuts into your CoA reducing the amount you could borrow. That doesn’t seem to be the case though...
Looking at my local state school: tuition is $38,000 and room & board is $10,000 and the CoA is $60,000. So basically even if my BAH erases all $10,000 for room and board and my tuition portion is gone because of my Voc rehab support... I could still borrow up to $12,000 each year but it’s up to me to obviously spend that appropriately. Can any verify this?
You can borrow up to your full COA while in the Voc Rehab program according to United States Code, title 38, Chapter 31: Training and Rehabilitation for Veterans with Service-Connected Disabilities.
"For FSA purposes, federal veterans education benefits, as defined under Section 480(c) of the HEA, are not treated as estimated financial assistance (EFA)." — from Student Aid Financial Handbook
Can you provide a link for this student aid financial handbook? Quickly tried to search the VA website and couldn't find it. Doesn't affect my personal situation, but if what you are saying is correct, there are some fellow veterans at my school that would benefit immensely. I'd appreciate the help!
Thanks man!Federal Student Aid - IFAP: iLibrary - Federal Student Aid Handbook
My quote was from the Student Financial Aid Handbook in 2016, but there’s no change to the law as far as I’m concerned.
Hello everyone,
I was accepted to a few medical schools and will be starting in 2018. I am using Voc Rehab to pay and was wondering what, if anything, happens during residency. Given that medical residents are essentially participating in on-the-job training, will I be eligible for any benefits throughout residency? I know that legally speaking residents are employees, not students, but am hoping someone can definitively tell me what a medical resident is in the eyes of Voc Rehab. Thank you!
I figured as much. Thanks!You answered your own question. You’re an employee making $50-70k/yr starting without debt. That’s your job, so benefits stop (but you continue to receive disability comp).
As an added confirmation, I asked my VRC the same question and he said it does not count as training, you are considered rehabilitated at that point. One small benefit is that the will continue to pay your stipend for up a certain period (I think 90 days if I remember correctly) while you "look" for work. Thus, if there is some gap time between when you graduate and your residency starts, you will still have your stipend coming in for a bit.I figured as much. Thanks!
Excellent. Thank you for asking!As an added confirmation, I asked my VRC the same question and he said it does not count as training, you are considered rehabilitated at that point. One small benefit is that the will continue to pay your stipend for up a certain period (I think 90 days if I remember correctly) while you "look" for work. Thus, if there is some gap time between when you graduate and your residency starts, you will still have your stipend coming in for a bit.
I'm a senior pre-med student. I've been finishing up my degree with Voc Rehab for the last two semesters and have already signed my academic agreement for them to pay for medical school. So I'm another one of those "it's possible". You guys seems to be the subject matter experts so I thought I'd ask:
Do you know how easily these contracts transfer to other states in the event that I don't get into Utah's only state school? Utah has a weird cultural component where everyone needs to become doctors/dentists so our med school gets an abnormally large amount of applications:seats. I see myself as being very competitive, but I'm just working on back up plans just in case.
Second, like most of you I'm a non-traditional student. I have a wife and 2 small kids and will be 30 when med school starts. How are some of you making ends meet? Obviously the BAH and my disability helps but we're kind of scraping by as it is. I know if I go to school with Voc Rehab that my family won't starve to death, but I worry about my wife being stuck at home with two kids because we can't afford for her to do anything with our kids. I've been reading up on financial aid and it seems that ever since the housing crash, schools have shrunk their Coast of Attendance making it pretty impossible to get enough money for a small family. Thoughts? Is it possible that BAH doesn't affect CoA which would allow me to borrow a little extra?
Thanks guys.
Has anyone tried using Voc Rehab to reimburse for travel expenses? (E.g flights for Step 2 CS, flights for residency interviews) It may be a longshot but I could see justifying flights as a program requirement. Attending CS is mandatory and interviewing for residency expected by the school and critical to securing gainful employment.
I don't know about for Step 2, but I highly doubt for residency interviews. I was told explicitly by my VRC that they would not cover any expenses concerned with the application process, including travel for testing or interviews. The only exception was that they would cover the cost of the MCAT, but basically only after I gained an acceptance.
Hey guys,
I have been approved for Voc Rehab to pay for my medical school and have a question. Does anyone have any experience trying to take out student loans IN ADDITION to using Voc Rehab?
I'll be attending medical school in Washington DC which is extremely expensive. I'm concerned that the BAH payment won't be enough for me to live off of and am interested in taking out $15K a year of loans to offset the cost of living. I can only receive federal loans for the difference of the Cost of Attendance (COA) and what the VA is paying with Voc Rehab. The problem is that the COA for the school is ~$84,000 ($60,250 for tuition + $18,090 for living expenses + everything else = $84,091.50). I will receive 9 months of BAH at $2,312.00 = $20,808 + 60,250 for tuition = $81,058. If this is how the school calculates my eligibility for loans, I can only take out ~$84,000 - ~$81,000 = $3,000. I need more than that to support my family. Given that Voc Rehab disperses tuition payments directly to the university and BAH payments directly to the student, will the university only use the tuition compensation in their calculation? That would be ~$84,000 COA - $60,250 tuition reimbursement = $23,750 optional for Federal Loans. I hope someone can answer this! Thank you!