Group of conditions affecting pelvic floor muscles and connective tissue including pelvic organ prolapse, urinary incontinence, fecal incontinence, and pelvic pain. Often results from childbirth, aging, surgery, or chronic strain. Symptoms include pelvic pressure, bulging, incontinence, constipation, and pain. Significantly impacts daily activities and quality of life.
Severe symptoms. Complete prolapse, severe incontinence (urine and/or stool), chronic pain, significantly limiting activities and requiring surgery or causing complications
Moderately severe symptoms. Significant prolapse beyond introitus, frequent incontinence affecting daily activities, may require surgical intervention
Moderate symptoms. Moderate prolapse visible at introitus, frequent incontinence requiring pads, affecting activities and requiring pessary or ongoing treatment
Mild symptoms. Minor prolapse or stress incontinence with activity, managed conservatively with pelvic floor exercises and lifestyle modifications
Asymptomatic or minimal symptoms not affecting function
Medical Evidence
Current diagnosis from a qualified healthcare provider, medical records documenting symptoms and treatment history
Service Connection
Evidence linking your condition to military service (service treatment records, incident reports, or nexus letter)
Personal Statement
Your detailed account of how pelvic floor disorders affects your daily life and when symptoms began
Lay Evidence
Buddy letters from fellow service members or family who can corroborate your symptoms
During your Compensation & Pension exam for pelvic floor disorders, examiners will assess your symptoms against the rating criteria above.
Be specific: Describe your worst day, not your average day
Document everything: Bring copies of all medical records and evidence
Functional impact: Explain how symptoms affect work, sleep, and daily activities
VA Claims Assistant
Hey! I'm Scout, your VA claims assistant. I can help with questions about conditions, ratings, secondary connections, C&P exams, and more. What can I help you with?
Powered by ClaimDuty AI · Not legal or medical advice