In the new building, they now have a war locker, a coffin locker, desk drawers, and a bedside cabinet thing. Unless they changed it, all the uninspectable stuff is locked in your coffin locker.In the faces of OCS video, I see the racks have 2 drawers under them as opposed to a coffin locker and they are open for RLP. Where is everything else being kept, the only thing I don't see standing open is the desk drawers.
Eyes, anthros (body measurements, most commonly either arms are too short or femur is too long), and asthma. Not even asthma, just using an inhaler is sometimes enough.I guess this would be the right thread to ask this in, but what are most people NPQed for at ocs? I don't have any medical problems that I know of and my eyes are fine for NFO. Are there other major things besides eyes that DQ people? I feel like I always read about a lot of people getting NPQed at OCS and it's making me nervous.
I can't claim to know specifically, I haven't had to deal with it personally, but I would say to make sure the doctors know that your friend hasn't had any symptoms in a long time, and hasn't used an inhaler in a long time. Really hammer home that point. As long as a doctor didn't diagnose him/her more recently, it should be alright. Hopefully others with firsthand experience can shed some more light on the matter.If you have had childhood asthma but have never had an attack and are completely free of asthma now what is the best way not to get NPQ'ed? or your advice on when going to medical Monday? I know this isn't an easy question but it is somewhat concerning. (asking for a friend btw) already got medically cleared for OCS going feb 2 SNA.
What medical records are we supposed to bring to OCS are we expected to have a full medical history or what?
IIRC, OCS is not a PCS move. You'll go to OCS and they'll get moved to your follow-on duty station when you get orders to it.