What diseases do not take into the army? This question torments all parents and youths for whom the military age is not far off . Sometimes such a statement of the question is the only way to "slope", and in the current state of the internal troops, this decision is difficult to recognize as erroneous.
A physical examination is an ongoing pre-call procedure. It is on it that doctors decide whether a young man is fit for service or not. But it will be reasonable for the draftees themselves to know whether their draft will be compulsory, or if they have every right for health reasons not to join the ranks of valiant warriors.
In order to know under what diseases they are not enlisted, it is enough to turn to the legislation of the Russian Federation, namely, the Government Decree of February 25, 2003 under number 123, which sets out questions of interest to conscripts.
For reference, it is worth noting that the concept of validity is ranked in five categories:
- Category A - the conscript is healthy and can be drafted into any kind of army;
- category B - the conscript has minor restrictions that preclude service in special forces, border troops and airborne troops;
- Category B - restrictions on shelf life under which a draftee is released in peacetime;
- category G - the draftee is given a period of time (usually up to a year) for treatment or additional examination;
- category D - the conscript is completely exempt from service.
So, the most common diseases and deviations include weight loss, scoliosis, visual impairment, drug addiction, alcoholism, flat feet, AIDS, tuberculosis, malignant neoplasms, diabetes mellitus, cirrhosis of the liver, hypertension, bronchial asthma, enuresis, mismatch of height and weight.
Usually, conscripts know in advance under what diseases they are not enlisted in the army, therefore, already at the first physical examination they’ll carefully bring the whole bunch of certificates and extracts that have accumulated. In some cases, there is a "heavy artillery" - a complete epicrisis in which all the diagnoses are written out. Based on these certificates and examination data, the head of the medical commission concludes whether he is fit for service or not. If in the certificates there are ailments that are not included in the list of diseases for which they are not taken into the army, then you will have to serve.
In principle, the conclusions of the medical board can be appealed in court, so if there is any disagreement, the conscript can ask for a document from the military enlistment office - the decision of the medical board. In the future, a control committee will be appointed at a higher level, which will impartially consider the case.
Due to the fact that some recruits were initially set up to “bypass the army,” they are trying with all sorts of tricks to achieve the coveted decision from the doctors. The most hackneyed method that still works is the decision of the local doctor, he will write a mythical ailment in the diagnosis (the list of diseases exempting from military service is not so great), the symptoms of which may not appear at the time of the examination. In any case, this move is quite risky, and the payback to the doctor is considerable. But when disclosing a conspiracy, both the conscript and the doctor who issued the false certificate may suffer.
Some "extreme" take the whole thing upon themselves - they read, under what diseases they do not take the army, they learn the symptoms and the theater begins. In such cases, it’s easy for doctors to figure out the draftee, because in ordinary studies you can easily identify inconsistencies that the rookie will have nothing to answer. Most often, young Kulibins come up with vegetative-vascular dystonia (and before the examination they drink drugs that cause sharp surges in pressure), a stomach ulcer (in this case, you can make a "fake" X-ray picture, and cause an ulcer for real), mental disorders (the hardest thing in this situation is to play a natural psycho).