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Things will run smoother if you have your physician(s) send a letter to the school at the same time as you send in your housing request form. You or your parents can attach a letter to the housing form explaining your health concerns and the type of living environment that would be optimum for you. List the types of things you do at home to have the proper environment. In the letter, explain that letters from your physician(s) are forthcoming. In the letter from your doctor, have the him/her explain EXACTLY what kind of room you need and for what reason. Residential Life can assign a certain kind of room due to a medical problem ONLY after getting the okay from the medical director of the student health center (right now that is Dr. Glass). We went through the process completely backwards our D's freshman year and it was a major stressor. We thought that listing the type of room she needed on the housing form would suffice. She was assigned her SIXTH of six choices - a triple in an old dorm. We then had to backtrack, call ResLife (who explained what I outlined above), get letters from her doctors sent to Dr. Glass, Dr. Glass had to send his approval to ResLife, and ResLife then had to wait for some shifts in already assigned housing to open up an appropriate room. ResLife was extremely helpful and did find a suitable room change for her, but if we had gone about it in the proper way in the beginning it wouldn't have been such a problem. Will also mention that you have to write a new letter, get new physician letters EVERY year to get a "medical" room assignment. Do it early, WAY before the room selection process starts and things run smoothly.
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