My daughter is interested in applying for a ROTC scholarship. However, she began treating with a doctor during COVID for anxiety/depression. She had been fine her whole life, but the separation from everyone and home schooling caused problems. She's an only child and used to be social and was home alone all the time. My husband and I recommended she see a counselor and then she got put on a minimum dose of anti-anxiety medication (actually half of what is normal as a trial period to see if it helped). She began treatment in May or so last year and still sees counselor so treatment was more than one year. She still had medicine, but doesn't really take it all the time as she said she doesn't notice a difference. The doctor said at this dose she might not even notice a difference, but just the act of taking the medication may be a help. In reading things, I believe this will cause her to be disqualified from ROTC. She is going to be a senior in high school. I am trying to search and get information. If she stopped the medication, is she disqualified forever from applying for a scholarship? Will this automatically disqualify her from applying for one in the fall? Forgive my ignorance on all of this. We are not a military family and I spent so much time looking into ROTC, but didn't even think about this part of things.