Few diagnostic disputes have more practical consequences for veterans than the difference between Adjustment Disorder and PTSD. These two diagnoses can look similar on the surface — both involve emotional and behavioral symptoms in response to stress — but they carry very different VA ratings and reflect very different levels of clinical severity.
Veterans are sometimes diagnosed with Adjustment Disorder when their symptoms actually meet the criteria for PTSD. Understanding the difference — and knowing how to challenge a misdiagnosis — can significantly affect the benefits a veteran receives.
What Is Adjustment Disorder?
Adjustment Disorder is diagnosed when a person develops emotional or behavioral symptoms in response to an identifiable stressor, and those symptoms are disproportionate to what would normally be expected given the circumstances. The diagnosis assumes the symptoms will resolve within six months once the stressor has ended or the person has adapted to it.
Adjustment Disorder is considered a relatively mild, time-limited condition. At its most severe, it is rated at 30 percent by the VA — and in many cases is rated lower.
What Is PTSD?
PTSD, by contrast, is a diagnosis that requires exposure to a specific type of traumatic event — one involving actual or threatened death, serious injury, or sexual violence — and the presence of a defined cluster of symptoms across four categories: intrusion, avoidance, negative cognition and mood, and hyperarousal. PTSD has no assumed endpoint. It is a chronic condition for many veterans, and its VA rating can reach 100 percent for total occupational and social impairment.
Where the Confusion Occurs
The distinction between these two diagnoses hinges on several factors: the nature of the stressor, the specific symptoms present, the duration and trajectory of those symptoms, and the overall severity of functional impairment. In a brief C&P exam, an examiner may not explore these factors in sufficient depth to make a fully accurate determination — particularly if the veteran minimizes their symptoms or the examiner lacks extensive forensic experience.
Some examiners use Adjustment Disorder as a default when symptoms are present but the picture is not fully clear. Others may use it when the in-service stressor does not rise to the threshold they believe PTSD requires — even when the legal and clinical standard is actually met.
What a Misdiagnosis Costs
The practical consequence of an Adjustment Disorder diagnosis instead of PTSD can be significant. A veteran rated at 30 percent for Adjustment Disorder when they should be rated at 70 percent for PTSD is receiving substantially lower monthly compensation — and potentially missing access to other benefits tied to higher ratings, such as Individual Unemployability.
How an Independent Evaluation Can Help
A comprehensive independent forensic psychological evaluation can re-examine the diagnostic picture with the depth and rigor a brief C&P exam may not allow. This includes a thorough review of service records, a structured clinical interview, standardized psychological testing when appropriate, and a carefully reasoned diagnostic opinion that addresses the specific criteria for both conditions.
If the evidence supports a PTSD diagnosis, that opinion can be submitted to the VA as part of an appeal or a request for a higher-level review — and it carries significant evidentiary weight when it is thorough, well-documented, and authored by a qualified forensic psychologist.