The military accession standard is below. Pore through it and see if anything in her medical history that she reported matches up. Candidates can occasionally trip themselves up by reporting something for which they have not been diagnosed by a medical professional, such as saying they have eczema because Aunt Sally said that was what that patch of dry skin was a few years ago. Or there is evidence of an inhaler being prescribed for a short-term situation, but the doctor put down asthma in some shape or form. There are also some situations where certain medications must have been taken more than a specific number of years ago; if they were taken more recently, it’s a DQ.
DoDMERB evaluates a candidate’s reported medical history against this standard and finds they either meet or don’t meet standards (Q/DQ). USCGA’s waiver authority then evaluates on a case basis for a waiver.
If you can figure out what it is, be prepared for possible requests for Additional Medical Information (AMI). Work the process. Stay hopeful. Waivers do happen.
This is precisely why posters here emphasize the importance of tending alternate plans. This is a challenging journey, and your daughter will learn a lot about being resilient, coaching herself through rough spots and persevering.
Browse through the DoDMERB forum for where your daughter can email and call during this DoDMERB website outage.