DC 7542 · 38 CFR 4.115a / 4.115b
Urinary Tract Conditions (BPH / Bladder / Kidney) C&P Exam Prep
To evaluate the current severity of your urinary tract condition - including voiding dysfunction, urinary tract infections, obstructed voiding symptoms, and any bladder or kidney complications - for VA disability rating purposes under 38 CFR - 4.115a and - 4.115b (DC 7542 and related codes). The examiner will document your symptoms, treatment history, functional impact, and objective findings to support the DBQ that drives your rating.
- Format:
- Interview + Physical
- Typical duration:
- 20-30 minutes
- DBQ form:
- Urinary_Tract_Conditions (Urinary_Tract_Conditions)
- Examiner:
- Urologist or Physician
What the examiner evaluates
- Presence and severity of voiding dysfunction (incontinence, frequency, urgency, retention, obstructed voiding)
- Daytime voiding interval (how often you urinate during waking hours)
- Nighttime awakening to void (nocturia frequency)
- Whether an appliance (catheter, external collection device, absorbent pads) is required
- History and frequency of urinary tract infections (UTIs) including bladder and urethral infections
- Use of suppressive drug therapy for recurrent UTIs
- Hospitalization history related to urinary conditions
- Presence of obstructive voiding symptoms: hesitancy, slow/weak stream, decreased force, post-void residuals >150cc, uroflowmetry peak flow rate <10cc/sec, stricture disease
- Bladder or urethral fistula, diverticulum of bladder, neurogenic or severely dysfunctional bladder
- History of bladder injury, suprapubic cystotomy, other bladder surgery
- Presence of benign or malignant neoplasms of the bladder or urethra
- Any renal dysfunction secondary to bladder/urethral condition
- Overall functional impact on occupation and daily activities
- Diagnosis, ICD codes, and etiology of voiding dysfunction
Exam is conducted in person with a urologist or physician in a clinical setting. You may be asked to provide a urine sample. Bring all relevant medical records, medication lists, and a written symptom summary. In most states you have the right to record the examination - notify the examiner at the start of the appointment. A support person may accompany you but should not speak on your behalf during the clinical evaluation.
Measurements and tests
Uroflowmetry (Peak Flow Rate)
What it measures: The maximum speed of urinary flow in cc/sec. A peak flow rate below 10 cc/sec is a specific threshold on the DBQ indicating obstructed or impaired voiding.
What to expect: You will be asked to urinate into a specialized device that measures flow rate. Try to arrive with a comfortably full bladder. Do not force or strain during the test - urinate as naturally as possible to get an accurate reading.
Critical thresholds
- Peak flow rate < 10 cc/sec Directly checked on the DBQ as an obstructed voiding sign; supports higher severity ratings under voiding dysfunction criteria
Tips
- Do not empty your bladder immediately before the test - arrive with urine present
- Inform the examiner if this result does not represent your typical worst-day voiding
- Ask the examiner to document your typical peak flow rate if prior studies show worse results
Pain considerations: Inform the examiner if you experience pain, burning, or discomfort during urination, as this affects functional severity beyond the numerical flow rate.
Post-Void Residual (PVR) Measurement
What it measures: The volume of urine remaining in the bladder after voiding. A PVR greater than 150cc is a specific DBQ threshold indicating incomplete bladder emptying and obstructed voiding.
What to expect: Measured by ultrasound (bladder scan) or catheterization after you urinate. A handheld ultrasound wand is placed on your lower abdomen. The test is brief and non-invasive if done by ultrasound.
Critical thresholds
- PVR > 150cc Directly checked on the DBQ as an obstructed voiding sign; indicates significant urinary retention supporting higher severity evaluation
Tips
- Urinate naturally before the scan - do not force out more than you normally would
- Tell the examiner if you regularly experience a sense of incomplete emptying
- Request that prior PVR results from your treating provider be entered into the record
Pain considerations: Note any suprapubic discomfort, bladder pressure, or pelvic pain associated with retention or incomplete emptying.
Voiding Frequency Documentation (Daytime Interval and Nocturia)
What it measures: How often you urinate during the day (daytime voiding interval) and how many times you wake at night to urinate (nocturia). These are direct rating criteria fields on the DBQ that determine disability percentage under urinary frequency criteria.
What to expect: The examiner will ask you verbally how often you urinate during the day and how many times per night you wake to void. This is not an objective test - it relies entirely on your accurate self-report. Report your worst typical pattern, not your best day.
Critical thresholds
- Daytime voiding every 1 hour or less Supports higher rating tier under voiding dysfunction urinary frequency criteria
- Nighttime awakening 3 or more times to void DBQ field RG_3E_Nighttime_awakening_to_void_3 - specifically thresholded at 3+ awakenings, supporting higher severity rating
- Daytime voiding every 2 hours Supports moderate rating tier under frequency criteria
Tips
- Keep a 3-7 day voiding diary before the exam noting exact times you urinate day and night
- Report your worst typical week, not a good week
- Be specific: 'I wake 3-4 times per night' is far more useful than 'I wake up a lot'
- Include how urgency affects your ability to reach the bathroom in time
Pain considerations: Note any pain or burning with urination (dysuria) and any suprapubic or flank pain associated with frequency episodes.
Urinalysis and Urine Culture (if ordered)
What it measures: Presence of infection, blood, protein, or other abnormalities in urine. Culture identifies the specific organism causing recurrent UTIs.
What to expect: You may be asked to provide a clean-catch midstream urine sample at the exam. Results may be reviewed by the examiner to document active infection or infection history.
Critical thresholds
- Recurrent symptomatic infections documented Directly supports rating under urinary tract infection criteria; suppressive drug therapy requirement elevates severity level
Tips
- Bring documentation of all past UTI diagnoses and cultures, including dates
- Note any hospitalizations required for UTI treatment
- Document all antibiotics used for UTIs and whether you are on continuous suppressive therapy
Pain considerations: Report any flank pain, fever, or chills associated with past UTI episodes to indicate upper urinary tract involvement (pyelonephritis).
Rating criteria by percentage
100%
Voiding dysfunction: Urinary leakage requiring the use of an appliance (external collection device or indwelling catheter). OR: Urinary tract infection: Requiring continuous intensive management with recurrent symptomatic infection requiring drainage by stent or nephrostomy tube, or requiring suppressive drug therapy with hospitalization for acute exacerbations more than once per year.
Key symptoms
- Total loss of urinary control requiring external collection device (condom catheter) or indwelling urethral or suprapubic catheter
- Continuous catheter drainage required
- Neurogenic or severely dysfunctional bladder requiring permanent management appliance
- Recurrent hospitalizations for severe UTI with need for intensive continuous treatment
- Drainage by stent or nephrostomy tube required
From 38 CFR: Under DC 7542 (Neurogenic Bladder), rate as voiding dysfunction or UTI whichever is predominant. The 100% level under voiding dysfunction requires urinary leakage requiring use of an appliance. Note: Review for SMC entitlement under 38 U.S.C. 1114 for loss of use of a creative organ or need for regular aid and attendance.
60%
Voiding dysfunction: Requiring the wearing and frequent changing of absorbent materials (pads/diapers changed more than 4 times per day). OR: Urinary tract infection: Recurrent symptomatic infection requiring suppressive drug therapy.
Key symptoms
- Urinary incontinence requiring frequent pad or diaper changes (more than 4 per day)
- Inability to maintain continence without protective absorbent materials
- Recurrent UTIs requiring continuous/suppressive antibiotic therapy
- Frequent urgency episodes resulting in leakage before reaching the bathroom
- Severe urge incontinence with multiple episodes per day
From 38 CFR: Under voiding dysfunction rating criteria, wearing and frequent changing of absorbent materials (pads changed more than 4x/day) corresponds to the 60% level. Under UTI criteria, recurrent symptomatic infections requiring suppressive drug therapy also support the 60% level.
40%
Voiding dysfunction: Requiring the wearing of absorbent materials that must be changed 2-4 times per day. OR: Urinary tract infection: Recurrent symptomatic infections with at least one hospitalization per year.
Key symptoms
- Urinary incontinence requiring pad or protective garment changes 2-4 times per day
- Significant urge or stress incontinence affecting daily activities
- Recurrent UTIs with at least one hospitalization per year
- Regular episodes of leakage requiring protective undergarments
- Frequent nocturia with incontinence episodes
From 38 CFR: Wearing of absorbent materials requiring 2-4 changes per day under voiding dysfunction criteria. Under UTI criteria, at least one annual hospitalization for acute exacerbation supports this level.
20%
Voiding dysfunction: Requires wearing of absorbent materials that do not need to be changed more than once daily (minimal leakage). OR: Urinary tract infection: Recurrent symptomatic infections with no hospitalization required.
Key symptoms
- Mild to moderate urinary incontinence requiring one pad change per day or less
- Urinary urgency and frequency causing social or occupational limitations
- Recurrent UTIs occurring without requiring hospitalization
- Daytime voiding frequency every 2 hours or less with urgency
- Nocturia 1-2 times per night affecting sleep quality
From 38 CFR: Wearing of absorbent material requiring one change or less per day. Recurrent symptomatic UTIs without hospitalization requirement. Obstructed voiding with uroflowmetry peak flow <10cc/sec or PVR >150cc without requiring appliance may also be considered in the overall severity picture.
0%
Service-connected voiding dysfunction or urinary tract condition that does not meet the minimum compensable threshold. Condition is present and documented but produces only intermittent, minimal, or well-controlled symptoms.
Key symptoms
- Diagnosed but asymptomatic or minimally symptomatic condition
- Well-controlled symptoms on minimal medication
- No incontinence, no recurrent infections, no obstructed voiding signs
- Condition documented and service-connected but not currently producing ratable functional impairment
From 38 CFR: A 0% evaluation is still service connection - it documents the condition in your record, preserves the effective date, and allows future rating increases as the condition progresses.
Describing your symptoms accurately
Urinary Incontinence and Pad Usage
How to describe it: Be specific about the number of pads, adult briefs, or protective garments you use per day and whether they are saturated or just damp when changed. State whether the incontinence is urge (sudden urge before reaching the bathroom), stress (leakage with coughing, sneezing, lifting), mixed, or continuous. Describe how often leakage occurs and how large the episodes are.
Example: On my worst days - which occur several times per week - I leak urine before I can reach the bathroom after a sudden urge. I wear three to four pads per day and they are wet through by the time I change them. I have had accidents where I did not make it to the bathroom in time and soiled my clothes. This prevents me from attending public events, long car trips, or situations where I cannot access a restroom every 30-45 minutes.
Examiner listens for: Number of pads changed per day, degree of saturation, type of incontinence, frequency of accidents, use of protective undergarments or external devices. These details directly map to the 20%, 40%, and 60%+ rating thresholds.
Avoid: Do not say 'I just wear a little pad just in case' if you are actually changing pads multiple times per day due to leakage. The examiner needs to know functional leakage is occurring, not just precautionary pad use.
Urinary Frequency - Daytime and Nighttime
How to describe it: Report your average daytime voiding interval in minutes or hours. State the number of times you wake from sleep specifically to urinate (nocturia). Report your worst typical week, not an unusually good day. The DBQ specifically asks whether you void every hour or less, every 2 hours, or at longer intervals. The nocturia threshold field asks specifically about 3 or more nighttime awakenings.
Example: During a typical bad week I urinate every 45 to 60 minutes during the day and cannot delay urination when the urge hits. At night I wake up 3 to 4 times to urinate, which fragments my sleep and leaves me exhausted the next day. I set alarms to remind myself to void before urgency episodes occur.
Examiner listens for: Specific intervals between daytime voids, number of nighttime awakenings, urgency without being able to delay, impact on sleep quality and daily function. The daytime interval and nocturia frequency are specific dropdown fields on the DBQ - your answers feed directly into the rating.
Avoid: Do not round up your voiding interval to make it sound better ('about every two hours') if you are actually voiding every hour. Report the frequency that is accurate for your condition on typical days.
Obstructed Voiding Symptoms (Hesitancy, Weak Stream, Retention)
How to describe it: Describe any difficulty initiating urination (hesitancy), a slow or weak urinary stream, dribbling at the end of urination, the sensation of incomplete bladder emptying, straining required to void, and any episodes of urinary retention requiring catheterization. Reference any prior uroflowmetry or post-void residual test results from your treating provider.
Example: I stand at the toilet for 30 to 60 seconds before urine starts flowing. My stream is thin and weak and frequently stops and starts. After voiding I still feel like my bladder is not empty, and within 20-30 minutes I feel the urge to void again. My urologist found a post-void residual of over 200cc on my last visit. On bad days I cannot void at all and have needed catheterization in the emergency room.
Examiner listens for: Hesitancy duration, stream force, intermittent stream, straining, sensation of incomplete emptying, prior retention episodes, prior catheterizations, uroflowmetry results below 10cc/sec, PVR above 150cc. These map to specific DBQ checkboxes for obstructed voiding signs.
Avoid: Do not omit mention of any past catheterizations for retention or ER visits for urinary retention - these are significant findings. Do not describe your stream as 'normal' on the exam day if your typical stream is weak or slow.
Recurrent Urinary Tract Infections
How to describe it: State the number of diagnosed UTIs you have had in the past year and over your service-connected condition history. Note whether any required hospitalization, IV antibiotics, or emergency care. State whether you are currently on suppressive or prophylactic antibiotic therapy and what medication. Describe symptoms of each UTI episode including fever, chills, flank pain, or pyelonephritis.
Example: Over the past 12 months I have had 5 documented urinary tract infections, two of which required emergency room visits and one required a 3-day hospitalization for IV antibiotics. I have been on low-dose daily nitrofurantoin for the past 8 months as suppressive therapy. Even on suppressive therapy I still have breakthrough infections every 2-3 months with burning, urgency, frequency, and pelvic pain.
Examiner listens for: Number of UTIs per year, whether hospitalization was required, current suppressive drug therapy, organisms involved if known, whether infections are secondary to obstruction or neurogenic bladder. Suppressive drug therapy is a key DBQ field (field 112) that elevates severity. Hospitalization frequency maps to the 40% threshold.
Avoid: Do not say 'I get some infections' without specifying frequency, severity, and treatment. Do not forget to mention suppressive therapy - this is a significant rating factor. Bring a list of all UTI episodes with dates and treatments.
Appliance and Catheter Use
How to describe it: If you use any appliance to manage your urinary condition - external condom catheter, indwelling urethral catheter, suprapubic catheter, intermittent catheterization, external drainage bag, or absorbent undergarments - describe the type, how often it is used, and whether use is continuous or intermittent. The DBQ asks specifically whether an appliance is required to control or manage voiding dysfunction.
Example: I perform clean intermittent self-catheterization (CIC) 4 to 5 times per day because I cannot adequately empty my bladder on my own. Without catheterization my post-void residual exceeds 300cc and I experience significant urinary urgency and overflow incontinence. I carry catheter supplies with me at all times and must plan any activity around catheter access.
Examiner listens for: Type of appliance used, frequency of use, whether use is continuous or intermittent, functional burden of appliance management, social and occupational impact. Appliance use is the 100% threshold under voiding dysfunction criteria.
Avoid: Do not minimize appliance use as 'just a precaution' if it is medically necessary for bladder emptying or continence management. Describe the full burden of managing the appliance in daily life.
Functional and Occupational Impact
How to describe it: Describe how your urinary condition affects your ability to work, maintain relationships, participate in social activities, sleep, travel, and perform daily tasks. Be specific about job limitations, missed work, inability to perform certain duties, and psychological impact including embarrassment, anxiety about accidents, and social isolation.
Example: My urinary urgency and frequency have forced me to change careers - I left my job as a truck driver because I could not control bathroom stop timing on long hauls. I now work from home to maintain access to a bathroom at all times. I avoid social events, movie theaters, and air travel. My interrupted sleep from nocturia leaves me fatigued and unable to concentrate. My relationship has suffered due to sexual dysfunction related to my bladder condition.
Examiner listens for: Specific occupational limitations, changes in employment, avoided activities, sleep disruption, social withdrawal, need for proximity to restrooms, psychological burden. The functional impact section of the DBQ (field 194) requires the examiner to describe impact on occupation and daily activities.
Avoid: Do not say 'it's manageable' or 'I just deal with it.' The examiner needs to understand the real cost of managing this condition on your daily functioning. Underreporting functional impact is the most common source of under-rating.
Common mistakes to avoid
Reporting best-day symptoms instead of worst typical day
Why: Veterans often present their condition in the most optimistic light, but VA rating criteria evaluate the average severity of the condition over time, with emphasis on the worst functional impact. M21-1 guidance instructs examiners to capture the full range of disability including worst-day presentations.
Do this instead: Before the exam, identify your worst typical week in the past month. Report those symptoms clearly. Use phrases like: 'On my worst days, which happen several times per week...' or 'My urologist's records from [date] show...' Bring a voiding diary documenting your actual frequency.
Impact: Can mean the difference between 20% and 60% depending on pad change frequency and voiding interval
Failing to report pad usage accurately
Why: The exact number of pads or protective garments changed per day is a direct rating threshold: 1 or fewer per day = 20%, 2-4 per day = 40%, more than 4 per day = 60%. Many veterans understate this because they are embarrassed or consider it minor.
Do this instead: Count the actual pads or protective garments you use on a typical bad day. Report that number specifically and honestly. If you are changing briefs or full adult diapers rather than thin pads, note that distinction - it indicates more significant leakage.
Impact: 20%, 40%, and 60% thresholds all turn on this single data point
Not mentioning suppressive antibiotic therapy
Why: Being on continuous or daily antibiotic therapy specifically to prevent recurrent UTIs is a significant finding on the DBQ (field 112) that corresponds to the 60% level under UTI criteria. Veterans may not connect this to their disability rating.
Do this instead: Tell the examiner explicitly: 'I am currently on [medication name] daily as suppressive therapy to prevent recurrent urinary tract infections.' Bring your medication list and any prescription records showing when suppressive therapy began.
Impact: 60% under UTI criteria
Omitting hospitalization history for UTIs or urinary retention
Why: Hospitalization for urinary conditions directly maps to the 40% rating threshold under UTI criteria and supports higher severity under voiding dysfunction. Veterans may not realize these hospitalizations are relevant or may have occurred years ago.
Do this instead: Compile a list of all hospitalizations, ER visits, and urgent care visits related to your urinary condition. Include dates, facilities, and reasons for each visit. Provide this list to the examiner or bring it to the exam.
Impact: 40% and higher under UTI and voiding dysfunction criteria
Failing to mention nighttime voiding frequency accurately
Why: The DBQ specifically captures nocturia at the threshold of 3 or more awakenings per night (field RG_3E_Nighttime_awakening_to_void_3). Veterans who actually wake 3-4 times often say 'a couple of times' which may be recorded as 2, below the threshold.
Do this instead: Count your nocturia episodes for one week before the exam. If you wake 3 or more times on typical nights, state that specific number clearly: 'I wake 3 to 4 times per night to urinate on most nights.'
Impact: Frequency rating thresholds; nocturia affects voiding dysfunction severity assessment
Not bringing prior urological test results to the exam
Why: The examiner may not have access to your private provider's uroflowmetry, PVR measurements, cystoscopy, urodynamic studies, or culture results. Without this objective data, your rating relies only on self-report and the current exam, which may not reflect your true severity.
Do this instead: Gather all urological test results from the past 2-3 years including uroflowmetry reports, bladder scan PVR results, urodynamic studies, cystoscopy reports, urine culture results, and any imaging. Bring copies or ensure they are in your VA electronic record.
Impact: All rating levels - objective data strengthens every aspect of the DBQ
Minimizing the functional impact on occupation and daily life
Why: The functional impact section of the DBQ (field 194) directly influences how the examiner describes your disability's effect on employability and daily activities. Inadequate functional impact documentation can prevent appropriate rating and may affect TDIU eligibility.
Do this instead: Prepare a written statement describing specifically how your urinary condition affects your job, commute, social life, sleep, travel, and relationships. Hand this to the examiner or read it aloud at the exam.
Impact: All levels; critical for TDIU and SMC evaluations
Prep checklist
- critical
Keep a 7-day voiding diary
Track every void for one full week before the exam: time of each void, any urgency, any leakage, pad changes, and nocturia awakenings. Record both good days and bad days. Bring the diary to your exam as objective documentation of your typical voiding pattern.
before exam
- critical
Compile all urological records and test results
Gather uroflowmetry reports, post-void residual measurements, urodynamic studies, cystoscopy reports, bladder scan results, urine culture results with organisms identified, and any imaging (renal ultrasound, CT scan). Include records from both VA and private providers. Ensure these are in your VA electronic health record or bring physical copies.
before exam
- critical
Prepare a complete medication and treatment list
List all current medications with dosages including alpha-blockers (tamsulosin, alfuzosin), 5-alpha reductase inhibitors (finasteride, dutasteride), anticholinergics (oxybutynin, tolterodine, solifenacin), beta-3 agonists (mirabegron), and especially any suppressive antibiotics (nitrofurantoin, trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole). Note start dates for suppressive therapy.
before exam
- critical
Document all UTIs in the past 2-3 years
List every UTI episode you can recall with approximate dates, symptoms, treating provider, antibiotic prescribed, and whether any required ER visits or hospitalization. Note if any resulted in pyelonephritis (kidney infection) with fever/chills/flank pain.
before exam
- critical
Write a functional impact statement
Prepare a 1-2 page written statement describing how your urinary condition affects your job or ability to work, daily activities, sleep, travel, social life, and relationships. Be specific: 'I must void every 45 minutes which prevents me from traveling more than 20 miles from a restroom' is far more useful than 'it limits my activities.'
before exam
- critical
Document appliance and catheter use
If you use any catheter (intermittent self-catheterization, indwelling, suprapubic), external collection device, or absorbent products (pads, adult briefs), document the type, brand, frequency of use per day, and how long you have needed the device. Request a letter from your urologist confirming the medical necessity.
before exam
- recommended
Research your state's recording law
In most states, veterans have the right to record their C&P examination. Check your state's consent requirements (one-party vs. two-party consent). If permitted, bring a phone or recording device and notify the examiner at the start of the appointment: 'I am recording this examination for my personal records.'
before exam
- recommended
Obtain a buddy statement from a caregiver or family member
Ask a family member, caregiver, or roommate who witnesses your urinary symptoms daily to write a statement describing what they observe: frequency of bathroom trips, nighttime awakenings, pad changes, accidents, or limitations they have witnessed. Submit this to VA as supporting evidence alongside your claim.
before exam
- recommended
Obtain a letter from your treating urologist
Ask your urologist to write a letter summarizing your diagnosis, symptoms, test results, treatment history, and functional limitations. Specifically request that they note suppressive therapy, catheter use, pad requirements, and any uroflowmetry or PVR measurements. This letter becomes part of the evidence record.
before exam
- optional
Review your C-file and prior exam reports
Request your C-file through eBenefits or with your VSO. Review any prior C&P exam reports to identify gaps or inaccuracies in how your condition was previously documented. Note discrepancies to address at the current exam.
before exam
- critical
Arrive with a comfortably full bladder if uroflowmetry is scheduled
If uroflowmetry or post-void residual testing is scheduled, do not empty your bladder in the 1-2 hours before the exam. Arriving with a comfortably full bladder is necessary for accurate flow rate and PVR measurements. Confirm in advance whether these tests are part of your exam.
day of
- critical
Bring all documentation in organized form
Bring your voiding diary, medication list, UTI history, functional impact statement, urological test results, treating provider letter, and any hospitalization records in a organized folder. Offer these to the examiner at the start of the appointment and ask that they be noted as reviewed in the DBQ.
day of
- recommended
Take note of examiner name, credentials, and exam duration
Note the full name and credentials of your examiner, the start and end time of the exam, and whether the examiner reviewed your records. This information is important if you need to challenge an inadequate exam finding.
day of
- critical
Report worst-day symptoms, not best-day
When the examiner asks about your symptoms, consciously think about your worst typical week in the past month - not today, not an unusually good period. Use language like 'on my worst days, which occur most weeks...' or 'my typical bad week involves...'
day of
- critical
Describe all symptoms even if not directly asked
If the examiner does not ask about a specific symptom - such as nocturia, post-void dribbling, perineal pain, or the impact on sleep - volunteer that information. Say: 'I also want to make sure you know about...' All symptoms relevant to the DBQ should be on record.
day of
- critical
Confirm the examiner reviews your records
Ask the examiner directly: 'Have you had a chance to review my medical records?' If not, offer your documentation and ensure they at least note it in the DBQ's evidence reviewed section. An exam based solely on a brief interview without record review may be inadequate.
during exam
- critical
Correct any inaccurate statements in real time
If the examiner states something inaccurate about your symptoms, gently correct it immediately: 'I want to clarify - I said I wake up 3 times per night to void, not just once.' Do not let inaccurate summaries stand unchallenged during the exam.
during exam
- recommended
Mention any related conditions or secondary complications
Mention any conditions that are secondary to or caused by your urinary condition, including renal dysfunction (impaired kidney function), sexual dysfunction, skin irritation or dermatitis from incontinence, anxiety or depression related to your condition, or sleep disruption. These may qualify for separate secondary service connection.
during exam
- critical
Write down what happened while memory is fresh
Immediately after the exam, write a detailed summary of what was asked, what you said, what the examiner did and did not examine, how long the exam lasted, and whether the examiner reviewed your records. Keep this for your records in case you need to file a CUE claim or request a new exam.
after exam
- critical
Request a copy of the completed DBQ
You are entitled to a copy of your completed DBQ and C&P exam report. Request it through your VSO, your VA patient portal, or by submitting a records request. Review the report for accuracy, particularly the voiding frequency, pad change frequency, appliance use, and infection history fields.
after exam
- recommended
File a buddy statement if not already submitted
If you did not submit a buddy statement before the exam, do so immediately after as supplemental evidence. A caregiver or family member statement describing observed symptoms can strengthen your claim record before a rating decision is issued.
after exam
- recommended
Challenge an inadequate exam if necessary
If the exam lasted less than 10 minutes, the examiner did not review your records, your symptoms were not accurately captured, or the DBQ contains errors, contact your VSO immediately. You may be entitled to a new C&P examination. File a notice of disagreement or supplemental claim with a letter from your treating provider if the rating decision is based on an inadequate exam.
after exam
Your rights during a C&P exam
- You have the right to request a copy of your completed C&P examination report and DBQ after the exam is finalized - request this through your VA patient portal or VSO.
- You have the right to record your C&P examination in most states - check your state's consent laws before the exam. One-party consent states allow recording without notifying the examiner; two-party consent states require you to notify the examiner, which is recommended in all cases regardless of law.
- You have the right to bring a support person (family member, VSO representative, or caregiver) to your C&P examination. That person may not speak during the medical evaluation but may be present for support.
- You have the right to challenge an inadequate C&P examination. If the examiner did not review your records, the exam was unreasonably brief, or the DBQ does not accurately reflect your reported symptoms, you may request a new examination by submitting a supplemental claim with a nexus or rebuttal letter from your treating provider.
- You have the right to submit additional evidence - including treating provider letters, buddy statements, voiding diaries, urological test results, and hospital records - before or after your C&P exam to supplement the examination record.
- You have the right to TDIU (Total Disability Individual Unemployability) consideration if your urinary condition or combination of conditions prevents you from maintaining substantially gainful employment, even if your combined rating does not reach 100%.
- You have the right to review for Special Monthly Compensation (SMC) if your condition results in loss of use of a creative organ, need for regular aid and attendance, or inability to leave your home without assistance due to urinary disability severity.
- Under the PACT Act and related legislation, you have the right to a fully developed claim with VA's assistance in obtaining federal records - VA must make reasonable efforts to obtain your service treatment records and VA medical records on your behalf.
- You have the right to a rating decision based on the benefit of the doubt standard - when evidence is in approximate balance, the decision must be resolved in your favor per 38 CFR - 3.102.
- You have the right to appeal any rating decision you disagree with through the Supplemental Claim lane, Higher-Level Review lane, or Board of Veterans Appeals, each with different evidence rules and timelines.
Related conditions
- Neurogenic Bladder DC 7542 is the primary diagnostic code for neurogenic bladder, which is rated as voiding dysfunction or UTI whichever is predominant. Neurogenic bladder is commonly secondary to spinal cord injury, multiple sclerosis, and other neurological conditions. If your bladder dysfunction is caused by a neurological condition, ensure both the neurological primary condition and the secondary bladder condition are separately claimed.
- Benign Prostatic Hyperplasia (BPH) BPH is a common cause of obstructive voiding dysfunction in male veterans. It may be rated under DC 7527 or under the voiding dysfunction criteria of - 4.115a. If BPH causes recurrent UTIs or voiding dysfunction, the BPH and its residuals should both be addressed on the DBQ.
- Chronic Pyelonephritis (Kidney Infection) DC 7504 covers chronic pyelonephritis, rated as renal dysfunction or urinary tract infection whichever is predominant. Upper UTIs involving the kidneys (pyelonephritis) with fever, flank pain, and systemic illness are more severe than lower UTIs and support higher ratings. If you have had recurrent kidney infections, ensure this is captured separately from bladder-only UTIs.
- Impaired Kidney Function / Renal Dysfunction Chronic bladder dysfunction, recurrent UTIs, obstruction, or neurogenic bladder can cause secondary renal dysfunction over time. The DBQ specifically asks whether the veteran has renal dysfunction secondary to bladder or urethral conditions (field RG_6I). If renal function is impaired, a separate renal dysfunction evaluation under - 4.115a may be warranted in addition to the voiding dysfunction rating.
- Urinary Incontinence DC 7517 covers urinary incontinence and may be rated separately from or in combination with the primary urinary tract condition. Urinary incontinence is a key symptom that directly drives the voiding dysfunction rating percentage based on pad usage frequency.
- Bladder Diverticulum DC 7545 covers diverticulum of the bladder, rated as voiding dysfunction or UTI whichever is predominant. Bladder diverticula can cause recurrent UTIs, incomplete emptying, and obstructed voiding - all of which are captured on this DBQ.
- Sexual Dysfunction / Erectile Dysfunction Urinary conditions including neurogenic bladder, BPH surgery, and pelvic conditions can cause secondary erectile dysfunction or sexual dysfunction. As seen in M21-1 coding examples, sexual dysfunction secondary to a primary neurological or urological condition may qualify for separate service connection and Special Monthly Compensation (SMC-K) for loss of use of a creative organ.
- Depression / Anxiety Secondary to Urinary Condition Chronic urinary conditions causing incontinence, pain, sleep disruption, and social isolation frequently cause or aggravate secondary mental health conditions including depression and anxiety. A secondary service connection claim for depression or anxiety caused by your urinary condition may be warranted if you are experiencing psychological symptoms.
- Skin Conditions / Dermatitis Secondary to Incontinence Chronic urinary incontinence requiring pads or protective garments can cause skin irritation, moisture-associated skin damage (MASD), or dermatitis in the perineal or inguinal areas. As noted in M21-1 examples, dermatitis secondary to a urinary condition may be separately rated under DC 7806.
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This guide covers what to expect for any veteran with this condition. If you have already uploaded your medical records, sign in to generate a packet that maps your specific symptoms to the DBQ fields your examiner will fill out.
This C&P exam preparation guide is for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal, medical, or claims advice. Always consult with a qualified Veterans Service Organization (VSO) representative or VA-accredited attorney for guidance specific to your claim. Never exaggerate, minimize, or fabricate symptoms during a C&P examination.