Medical qualification

DoDMERB is where strong applications stall.

Every ROTC scholarship requires medical qualification through the Department of Defense Medical Examination Review Board. A disqualification is not the end. It is the start of a process, and the families who treat it that way are the ones who finish it.

$800 · case review + waiver strategy · physician-reviewed behind the scenes
How the process works

From exam to waiver decision.

DoDMERB is a paperwork process with medical stakes, not a medical process with paperwork. Understanding the sequence is what keeps a family calm when the letter arrives.

  1. 01

    The exam

    Once a scholarship offer or application triggers it, DoDMERB schedules a medical history review and a physical exam with a contracted provider near you. The history form matters as much as the exam itself. Every item your student reports is read against the DoD accession standards.

  2. 02

    The finding

    DoDMERB returns one of three outcomes: qualified, a remedial request for more documentation, or a disqualification with a code identifying the condition under the accession standard. A code on the letter is a classification, not a verdict on your student.

  3. 03

    The waiver path

    A disqualification opens a second review. Each service runs its own waiver authority, and waivers are granted every cycle. What moves a case is the record: which documents are gathered, which specialists weigh in, and how the medical history is presented.

  4. 04

    The clock

    Waiver review runs on its own timeline while scholarship boards and school deadlines keep moving. Families handling DoDMERB for the first time usually learn the rules after the calendar has tightened. Knowing the sequence early is most of the advantage.

Who reviews cases

The physician behind the review.

Dr. (COL) Arthur B. Cajigal, former Command Surgeon at USMEPCOM and Army Cadet Command

Dr. (COL) Arthur B. Cajigal

DoDMERB · Medical case review

Former Command Surgeon at USMEPCOM and Army Cadet Command. Served as DoDMERB Physician Reviewer and Chief at the United States Air Force Academy. He has sat on the side of the desk where these files are decided.

Dr. Cajigal consults behind the scenes. Families do not meet with him directly. His read of your student's case file informs the strategy you receive, the same way a review board sees the record: on paper, in full.

The engagement

DoDMERB Consulting.

A focused engagement for families facing a disqualification, or expecting one. Your student's case file is reviewed, the disqualifying codes are mapped against the relevant standards, and you receive a clear plan for the waiver submission: what to gather, which specialists should write, and in what order.

For cases requiring extended waiver support, an optional follow-on engagement is available. Most families do not need it. The ones who do are told why, in plain terms, before anything continues.

NROTC midshipman candidates holding a timed plank in a line during physical training
Medical qualification is the quiet prerequisite. Every standard a midshipman meets afterward assumes it.
Navy ROTC students performing pushups in a line during a fitness assessment on a turf field
The fitness assessment gets the attention. The medical file decides who takes the field at all.
The whole file

Medical strategy is one part. The Blueprint reads the whole file.

One hour with LTC Kirkland. A clear read of where your student stands across academics, fitness, and the application itself, with the medical path in context.

Schedule your ROTC Scholarship Blueprint.
$400 · 60 min · LTC Kirkland · credited toward Interview Preparation or The Scholarship Track