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Ideas
about Reforming the System for the Disabled |
by:
Tim
Moore |
There's
an excellent website online published by
a Dr. Holden, a former DDS medical consultant.
I couldn't help but comment on one of the
good doctor's recent writings in which he
makes several suggestions for evaluation
reform. To get right to the point, Dr. Holden's
reform ideas seem to strongly revolve around
the notions of upgrading the salaries of
examiners and instituting a better medical
training regimen for these workhorses of
the system.
Dr. Holden's points are, to some extent,
on target. For starters, examiners don't
get enough medical training. As a former
examiner myself, I don't mind saying that.
And I seriously question the entire concept
of SDM's ("single decision maker" examiners
who can slap decisions on cases without
the input of their unit medical consultants----how
crazy is that? Examiners are NOT doctors).
Dr. Holden also questions the soundness
of utilizing lawyers--who are now wearing
the hats of federal administrative law judges--to
adjudicate "medical evaluation cases". Personally,
I never really understood just why it is
that an ALJ (someone with legal training,
not medical training) is necessarily needed
to preside over disability hearings. Judges
are not medical professionals and disability
hearings are not legal court proceedings
in the strictest sense. In fact, this is
exactly why non attorneys are allowed to
represent claimants at such hearings.
I really have no major problem with any
of Dr. Holden's core assertions. However,
I guess it's true that we are all, to some
extent, limited by our experiences and this
holds true for MD's as well.
While Holden's suggestion for more indepth
medical training for DDS examiners is a
good one, his suggestions for overall reform
miss the REAL PROBLEM (IMO - just my opinion)
with DDS. What's that problem?
Here it is: DQB. As all examiners, reps,
judges, and CRs know, a percentage of completed
DDS files are sent off to this unit to see
if all the i's are dotted and all the t's
have been properly crossed. And, interestingly
enough, more cases that were MARKED FOR
APPROVAL come back reversed i.e. overturned
than vice-versa.
When a case is returned from DDS, it's like
a black mark for the examiner because it
directly implies that he or she flubbed
up. It's a black mark for the unit supervisor
because the return came back to his or her
unit. And it's a black mark for the dds
administrators because the more DQB returns
you get, the worse it makes your agency
look.
So, human nature being what it is, what
is the outcome at all dds locations in the
good old USA?
It means that supervisors tend to exert
an iron grip over the examiners in their
units. It also means that supervisors will
always lean more toward denials rather than
approvals. And...if a case is one of "those"
cases that is right on the line, you can
be sure that the examiner won't stick his
or her neck out because the likelihood is
that the unit supervisor will have to talk
to the examiner about his or her decision-making
ability, (i.e. imply to them that they better
get in line with the program and/or potentially
find a new job).
Now, this may not have occurred to Dr. Holden
because he was not an examiner. And it may
not have occurred to most reps because they,
too, were never examiners (though some examiners
later went on to become attorneys or non
attorney reps). And it certainly would not
occur to an SSA CR
because, for all intents and purposes, they
know very little about the actual disability
evaluation process, aside from the mechanics
of taking claims and then processing them
once DDS is finished with the medical evaluation.
Of course, I am not saying that we need
to fill the spots currently occupied by
ALJ's with level 3 disability examiners
or SSA Disability Case managers (that is,
if they ever actually created such a DCM
position). I'm not saying we should get
rid of the SDM program (though it wouldn't
bother me), or dispense with quality review.
But, I do think it's pretty plain that external
quality review has had an insidious effect
on DDS claims processing-----with disability
claimants coming out the clear loser.
So, what's the alternative to DQB? In all
candor, I don't know. But, regarding such
issues (disability system reform from a
"structural perspective") perhaps that's
something that the brighter heads in NADR
and NOSSCR should ponder and make proposals
toward.
About the author:
The author of this article is Timothy Moore,
who, in addition to being a former food
stamp caseworker, medicaid caseworker and
AFDC caseworker, is a former disability
claims examiner. He publishes information
at Social
Security Disability Tips and Secrets
which features a helpful and informative
Social
Security Disability faq
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