The way the process works now is that the person presents, as this lady's fiancé did, for help. He is seen in the clinic and assessed and then offered treatment. I don't want to give the impression that a person is seen, assessed, and released. That isn't what happens. They're afforded a course of treatment, but because the military requires a person to be deployable, the expectation is that with treatment they're going to return to health within a period of time. In returning to health, then, they return to their full functioning and their full deployability, and then they are not released.
Not having been in the office with that patient or the doctor, I don't know what was said, but to predict from the beginning that a person is going to be released from the military seems premature.