Military sexual trauma is one of the most under-claimed and under-rated categories of PTSD in the VA system, not because the claims lack merit, but because the evidence rules are widely misunderstood. The framework for MST-based PTSD claims is actually more veteran-friendly than most other PTSD pathways. The challenge is knowing how to use it.
Under 38 CFR 3.304(f)(5), PTSD claims based on military sexual trauma (MST) have a specific evidentiary framework. Critically, the VA may not require corroboration of the sexual assault or battery through service records. The assault itself doesn't need documentation. What the VA evaluates is behavioral markers that are consistent with having experienced the trauma.
This distinction matters enormously. The person who reported the assault has no evidentiary advantage over the person who didn't, because reporting wasn't required for the claim.
When direct documentation doesn't exist, the VA looks for evidence that your behavior during or after service is consistent with having experienced sexual trauma. Accepted corroborating markers include:
You don't need all of these. A single credible marker, combined with your own statement, can satisfy the corroboration requirement under the regulatory framework.
Your personal statement is foundational. It should address:
Survivors of MST sometimes minimize their own accounts, particularly when writing a formal statement to a federal agency. The personal statement should be specific and complete. You're describing a traumatic experience for legal purposes, and that requires honesty about what happened and how it affected you.
Certain patterns in personal statements are consistently associated with weaker claim outcomes. These aren't mistakes in the sense that you did something wrong; they're patterns that trained adjudicators identify as reducing the evidentiary weight of a statement:
You know what happened and how it affected you. The statement is the place to say it plainly, without filtering for the reader's comfort. A VSO or accredited claims agent can review a draft before submission.
MST C&P examinations are supposed to be conducted by mental health professionals specifically trained in trauma-sensitive examination. You have the right to request an examiner of your preferred gender. You can make that request in writing before the examination.
The examiner will evaluate:
The examiner does not adjudicate whether the assault actually happened. That determination belongs to the rating activity, not the examiner.
Challenge this by identifying every behavioral marker in your record. Medical records, counseling notes, performance records, and family statements all count. Request your complete military personnel file (Standard Form 180) if you haven't reviewed it carefully for relevant markers.
This is where a strong nexus letter matters. A physician-authored opinion that directly addresses the MST as the stressor, reviews your specific clinical history, and applies the current diagnostic criteria to your case is the counter to this denial.
If the VA argues your PTSD predated service, you need evidence of your mental health before the service period combined with clear documentation that PTSD symptoms either began or substantially worsened during service.
MST often produces secondary conditions that carry their own ratings:
For an overview of conditions frequently missed in PTSD claims broadly, see PTSD secondary conditions: the 10 most commonly overlooked.
The VA MST Support Team is a designated resource. Every VA medical center has an MST Coordinator who can connect veterans with MST-specific mental health services. Using these services generates treatment records that can support your claim.
If you're building an MST-based PTSD claim and want a physician-signed independent medical opinion that applies the current regulatory framework to your specific history, Flat Rate Nexus offers that service at flatratenexus.com/ptsd.html. Educational tools and a free nexus letter grader are also available at flatratenexus.com.
Thinking about your own claim? Every nexus letter we write goes through a full physician record review, cites peer-reviewed research, and is built around the actual evidence in your case.
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