• Formfiller@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    My son wanted to take the test but the Air Force recruiter told him that adhd disqualifies him and he won’t even allow him to take the asvab(entry test). He scored an 88% on the practice test. Honestly this is the best case scenario for me because now I can steer him towards a better path without looking like the bad guy. My family has served in every American war for over 200 years and I’m hoping we can finally break this cycle of trauma.

    • sunbytes@lemmy.world
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      18 hours ago

      I didn’t realise it disqualified him. Is that the same for all military roles?

      I’ve heard accounts from people talking about ADHD affecting their work when on active duty (like, literally on a patrol in Afghanistan).

      Obviously it’s something I read on the internet, but I am curious.

      • megopie@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        16 hours ago

        a diagnosis and previous medication used to be a straight up disqualifier. Over the past few years they’ve slackened that a bit, with some branches going to “unmedicated for a year” or a medical waiver. Ultimately the policies around mental health in recruiting are based around conceptions from the 70s, and given that diagnosis methods have moved on from then, now tending to catch a lot more mild cases, way more people are getting disqualified due to things that used to not be noticed. To be clear, a lot of people currently in the US military today have ADHD, but they weren’t diagnosed until after they were admitted except for very recent recruits.

        Part of the reluctance to recruit anyone with any mental health diagnosis is the long shadow of “project 100,000” aka “ McNamara’s Folly”. Essentially a program where people who fell in to the bottom 10th percentile of testing on mental and physical were conscripted anyways to make up numbers during the Vietnam war. This lead to some pretty disastrous outcomes, with soldiers conscripted as part of this program dying at 3 times the normal rate. The movie forest gump touches on this a bit, but it kind of glosses over the real tragedy of it all nor the diversity of fucked up situations this created.

        The institutional memory of this has created a strong prejudice around any sort of mental health diagnosis in recruits, but again, this is in conflict with the fact that mental health is much less stigmatized these days, and much milder situations that were just ignored in the past are now diagnosed.

      • kadaverin0@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        16 hours ago

        The military turns down people for a lot of conditions you wouldn’t expect to matter that much. My brother was disqualified from the Air Force for a barely perceptible tremor in his right hand and a case of heavy metal poisoning he had when he was younger (a landlord didn’t inform my mother there was lead paint in the apartment). He didnt incur any permanent neurological damage from the poisoning but they still denied him.

      • bigfondue@lemmy.world
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        18 hours ago

        If you’ve ever been diagnosed and or taken medicine for any mental health condition, you are disqualified barring a waver. It is easier to get waivers when there is war going on.