I think you are automatically disqualified from Military Service. Google 'list of military disqualifications.'
Edit:
Lungs, chest wall, pleura, and mediastinum
The causes for rejection for appointment, enlistment, and induction are:
a. Abnormal elevation of the diaphragm, either side.
b. Abscess of the lung.
c. Acute infectious processes of the lung, until cured.
d. Asthma, including reactive airway disease, exercise induced bronchospasm or asthmatic bronchitis, reliably diagnosed at any age. Reliable diagnostic criteria should consist of any of the following elements:
(1) Substantiated history of cough, wheeze, and/or dyspnea that persists or recurs over a prolonged period of time, generally more than 6 months.
(2) If the diagnosis of asthma is in doubt, a test for reversible airflow obstruction (greater than a 15 percent increase in forced expiratory volume in 1 second (FEVI) following administration of an inhaled bronchodilator) or airway hyperactivity (exaggerated decrease in airflow induced by standard bronchoprovocation challenge such as methacholine inhalation or a demonstration of exercise-induced bronchospasm) must be performed.
e. Bronchitis, chronic, symptoms over 3 months occurring at least twice a year.
f. Bronchiectasis.
g. Bronchopleural fistula.
h. Bullous or generalized pulmonary emphysema.
i. Chronic mycotic diseases of the lung including coccidioidomycosis.
j. Chest wall malformation or fracture that interferes with vigorous physical exertion.
k. Empyema, including residual pleural effusion or unhealed sinuses of chest wall.
l. Extensive pulmonary fibrosis.
m. Foreign body in lung, trachea, or bronchus.
n. Lobectomy, with residual pulmonary disease or removal of more than one lobe.
o. Pleurisy with effusion, within the previous 2 years if known or unknown origin.
p. Pneumothorax during the year preceding examination if due to a simple trauma or surgery; during the 3 years preceding examination from spontaneous origin. Recurrent spontaneous pneumothorax after surgical correction or pleural sclerosis.
q. Sarcoidosis.
r. Silicone breast implants, encapsulated if less than 9 months since surgery or with symptomatic complications.
s. Tuberculous lesions.
2007-04-22 13:05:44
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answer #1
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answered by Death of Reason 2
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Asthma is an allergy and is triggered by something. The best non medication treatment for asthma is learning your triggers and avoiding them. Common triggers are smoke, dust, mold, mildew, plants, dust mites, pets and grass/weeds.
If you can not figure our your triggers, you may need to see an allergist and have allergy screening done. This may point out your triggers.
The National Asthma Prevention Program and the Expert Panel of Diagnosis and Management of Asthma both agree if you have to use a prescription inhaler such as albuterol more then two time per week, your asthma is NOT in control and you will need a prescription controller medication.
Controller medications are steroids (Asthmacort Asthmanex, Flovent, Pulmocort), Leukotriene modifier (Singulair, Aculade, Zyflo) or mast cell stabilizers (Cromolyn sodium, Intal, Tilade).
You may want to talk to your doctor about several strong controller medications and maybe Xolair shots.
If you want a proven, all-natural way to cure your asthma, without having to pay for useless medications with harmful side-effects, then this is the most important page you'll ever read.
2016-05-15 16:04:22
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answer #2
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answered by ? 4
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???
why would you want to join the Army knowing that you'll be required to do miles of running, work in dusty field conditions, or cold dry weather (or whatever will trigger your asthma.
Yes you could probably lie about it or deny having it, but when you enter and the asthma 'reappears' then you'll leave all your squadmates in a bind-they have to cover for your work. Joining is not a joke to be taking lightly. We have to deal with asthmatic at Army basic training (where I work....). In the past five years, the number of emergency aerial medevacs has increased several times, with some asthmatic recruits dying.
Public service is admirable. If you are interested in public service, there's a variety of ways from police/firefighting, US Public Health Services, teaching, etc...Please don't join the Military.
2007-04-22 13:20:06
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answer #3
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answered by Roderick F 5
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so i'm 17 and % to connect the army. I have been given informed final year I certainly have common allergies, I spoke to an cyber web officer some weeks in the past and she or he mentioned if I certainly have been clean for 5 years i ought to connect, yet I have been given given a pump final year because of the fact I had a chest an infection, I defined to the officer i did no longer use it and she or he mentioned i ought to get a docs be conscious and attempt and allure it, what do you think of my possibilities are high? additionally my allergies would not influence me different than for as quickly as I run yet i think of this is only because of the fact im no longer used to it, do you think of if I went back to the docs and defined i do no longer % my pump and that i are not getting affected, they could say i do no longer even have allergies anymore, my allergies replaced into in straight forward terms common besides so is there a raffle it ought to have only long gone? ive on no account had an allergies attack and ive in straight forward terms had a million pump the previous couple of years which i've got no longer used.
2016-10-03 10:12:18
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answer #4
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answered by ? 4
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No, you are permanently disqualified from military service.
Now let me ask you a question, who told you you had asthma, your mom, dad, doctor, is it documented, if it is documented and you lie to a recruiter and tell them no so you can get in. You are not allowed to take any medication with you to Basic Training and if you had an attack then that would be false enlistment. My advice to you if you want to join, go back to the doctor if you think you have outgrown it get tested and submit those medical documents to your recruiter and see if you can get a waiver, otherwise your out of luck.
2007-04-22 17:18:21
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answer #5
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answered by mar036 3
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Yes you can, i had lots of friends in the ARMY that have had asthma for their whole life, go talk to that recruiter now before you change your mind!!! Dont listen to anyone else who said no, they obviously have not served, if they had they would know ANYTHING can be waived in the ARMY, i had a guy in basic training that got a ******* 19 on his ASVAB. so yes you can, just talk to your recruiter
2007-04-22 13:12:18
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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Las medias no tiene que faltar de una armario, en amazon se encuentro una buena gama de medias tanto para mujer o especiales para hombres. Las medias son muy practicas, he comprado de muchas veces en amazon medias de cualquier tipo, cuando he necesitado unas medias elegantes y con mucho estilo he encontrado lo mejor, a un buen precio he podido comprar la medias perfectas que además de ser todo lo que buscaba son muy resistente.
2014-12-12 02:55:57
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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Call a recruiter they may be able to get your condition waived based on a review of your medical records.
2007-04-22 13:09:13
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answer #8
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answered by Michael S 1
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No you cant because there was someone that I know, that discharged because he developed Asthma
2007-04-22 13:10:28
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answer #9
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answered by bee bee boo 3
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I say not.
I know it from a captain in the military.
2007-04-22 13:09:13
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answer #10
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answered by nena_en_austin 5
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