The Veteran's hepatitis disability has not manifested in daily fatigue, malaise, and anorexia requiring dietary restriction or continuous medication, or incapacitating episodes with symptoms such as fatigue, malaise, nausea, vomiting, anorexia, arthralgia, and right upper quadrant pain having a total duration of at least two weeks but less than four weeks during the past 12-month period. The Veteran's hepatitis disability has not manifested itself in daily fatigue, malaise, and anorexia with minor weight loss and hepatomegaly or incapacitating episodes with symptoms such as fatigue, malaise, nausea, vomiting, anorexia, arthralgia, and right upper quadrant pain having a total duration of at least four weeks but less than six weeks during the past 12-month period. The Veteran's hepatitis disability has not manifested itself in daily fatigue, malaise, and anorexia with substantial weight loss (or other indication of malnutrition), and hepatomegaly or incapacitating episodes with symptoms such as fatigue, malaise, nausea, vomiting, anorexia, arthralgia, and right upper quadrant pain having a total duration of at least six weeks during the past 12-month period. The Veteran's hepatitis disability has not manifested itself in near-constant debilitating symptoms (such as fatigue, malaise, nausea, vomiting, anorexia, arthralgia, and right upper quadrant pain).
The deciding factor: The VA examiner found that the Veteran does not currently have any residual symptoms resulting from his hepatitis.
- Claimed conditions
- Hepatitis
- How they argued it
- Direct service connection
- Exposure basis
- None
- Rating assigned
- 10%
- Decision date
- September 19, 2019
- Citation
- 19173093
This is a plain-language summary generated by AI from a public Board of Veterans’ Appeals decision. It can contain errors — always verify against the original. Look up the original decision on VA.gov (opens in a new tab) using citation 19173093.
What this means for you
A denial is a starting point, not the end of the road. You can see why this claim fell short — and, if you are still inside the one-year window, the appeal lanes that may remain open to you.
What you can do next
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