PDA

View Full Version : Ritalin and Military Service?




swampfox
April 24th, 2009, 08:35 PM
I read that if you take Ritalin, antipsychotic medications or meds for ADD/ADHD, you can't serve in the military. Is this true? And if so, what are the possible implications behind it? Could a large portion of the 'Learning Disability' generation, who were put on these drugs for no good reason be denied service? Is it possible that this will leave us with a substantially smaller military within the next decade or two?




Type59
April 26th, 2009, 10:31 AM
I planned to join RAF as an intelligence analyst. However i read if you had have or had a skin problem then you cannot join. I have a skin problem, no way I can hide it unless I go steam room every week and peel off flaking skin. My point is they are very strict, I would assume they would bar people from service if they were prescribed drugs for mental health issues.

Gremlin29
April 28th, 2009, 11:09 AM
I read that if you take Ritalin, antipsychotic medications or meds for ADD/ADHD, you can't serve in the military. Is this true? And if so, what are the possible implications behind it? Could a large portion of the 'Learning Disability' generation, who were put on these drugs for no good reason be denied service? Is it possible that this will leave us with a substantially smaller military within the next decade or two?

I assume your talking about the US military? If you are taking Ritalin that is a disqualifier from service end of story. If you "took" Ritalin, it may or may not be a show stopper depending on certain variables (age last taken, period of time taken etc). The implications are it is a nasty drug with lasting psychological side affects which could make such a person a hazard to themselves and others. While such a person could function normally in the military during peace time and so forth the psycholgical aspects of combat manifest all sorts of unknowns. I believe they view the past use of psychotropics and the like as a ticking time bomb for individuals that go through the psychological stress of miltiary service which is quite unlike the day to day life of a civlian. So I don't think the disqualification is "for no good reason".

Also note that ADD/ADHD are considered psychological disorders. Personally I think ADD is bunk and Ritalin was and is a crutch for lazy parents.

Lastly, some recruiters will tell you that if your dumb enough to disclose something that they have no way of confirming, you are too dumb to carry a loaded weapon anyway. It's like Catch 22, only a sane person would admit that they were crazy, if they were in fact crazy.

swampfox
April 28th, 2009, 04:20 PM
So I don't think the disqualification is "for no good reason".

When I said for no good reason, I was referring to the reasons for being on Ritalin. When ADD and ADHD were becoming widely known a few years back, people scrambled to put their six-year-old kids on it because they couldn't sit still (like any other six year old). I'm sure there are implications behind these drugs being used that would give the military (yes, I was talking about the US) to deny service.

Gremlin29
April 28th, 2009, 06:07 PM
I was referring to the reasons for being on Ritalin


I need to brush up on my reading comprehension skills, my apologies. :)

It's a shame so many potential military careers were ruined by bad parenting. Anyway you can get a waiver but like all waivers some career fields are non-waiverable types limiting total potential.