| Literature DB >> 22720978 |
Jessica Anner1, Urban Schwegler, Regina Kunz, Bruno Trezzini, Wout de Boer.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Individuals who are sick and unable to work may receive wage replacement benefits from an insurer. For these provisions, a disability evaluation is required. This disability evaluation is criticised for lack of standardisation and transparency. The International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health (ICF) was developed to express the situation of people with disability. We discuss potential benefits of the ICF to structure and phrase disability evaluation in the field of social insurance. We describe core features of disability evaluation of the ICF across countries. We address how and to what extent the ICF may be applied in disability evaluation. DISCUSSION: The medical reports in disability evaluation contain the following core features: health condition, functional capacity, socio-medical history, feasibility of interventions and prognosis of work disability. Reports also address consistency, causal relations according to legal requirements, and ability to work. The ICF consists of a conceptual framework of functioning, disability and health, definitions referring to functioning, disability and health, and a hierarchical classification of these definitions. The ICF component 'activities and participation' is suited to capture functional capacity. Interventions can be described as environmental factors but these would need an additional qualifier to indicate feasibility. The components 'participation' and 'environmental factors' are suited to capture work requirements. The socio-medical history, the prognosis, and legal requirements are problematic to capture with both the ICF framework and classification.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22720978 PMCID: PMC3432619 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2458-12-470
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Reporting about work disability in social insurance: a European comparison
| 1) Functional capacity of the claimant | BE, CH, CZ, DE, FI, FR, GB, IT, NL, NO, SE, SI, SK1 |
| 2) Health condition (disease, symptoms, complaints) | CH, FI, NL, NO, SE |
| 3) Socio-medical history (claimant's development and severity of ill health condition, his previous efforts to regain health and return to work, job and social career) | BE, CH, CZ, DE, DK, FI, FR, IT, NL, NO, RO, SE, SI, SK |
| 4) Prognosis of work disability (Prognosis of disease and functional capacity) | BE, CH, CZ, DE, FI, FR, GB, IT, NL, NO, RO, SE, SI, SK |
| 5) Feasibility of therapeutic and rehabilitative interventions | BE, CH, DE, FI, FR, GB, IT, NL, NO, RO, SE, SI, SK |
| 6) Causality: functional incapacity exclusively caused by a health condition | CH, DE, FR, NL |
| 7) Consistency between impairments, activity limitations and restrictions in work | CH, DE, NL |
| 8) Ability to work | Expressed as percentage in BE, CH, FR |
| Expressed as degree of disability in CZ, NL, SL, SI, RO | |
| Expressed as hours of work: DE |
BE = Belgium, CH = Switzerland, CZ = Czech Republic, DE = Germany, FI = Finland, FR = France, GB = Great Britain, IT = Italy, NL = Netherlands, NO = Norway, RO = Romania, SE = Sweden, SI = Slovenia, SK1 = Slovakia. According to international abbreviation: http://www.iana.org/domains/root/db.
Figure 1 The framework of the ICF.
Figure 2 The classification of ICF categories in hierarchical organization of levels.
Example of a code, category and definition
| b280 | Sensation of pain | Sensation of unpleasant feeling indicating potential or actual damage to some body structure. Inclusions: sensations of generalized or localized pain in one or more body part, pain in a dermatome, stabbing pain, burning pain, dull pain, aching pain; impairments such as myalgia, analgesia and hyperalgesia |
Core features in disability evaluation and their coverage in the ICF
| 1) Functional capacity of the claimant | Activity and participation | Activity and participation | |
| 2 Health condition (Disease, symptoms, complaints) | Health condition Body functions/structures | (∅) Body functions/ structure | Disease is a component of the ICF framework but not included in the ICF definitions. It can be coded in the ICD*. |
| 3) Socio-medical history (claimant's development and severity of ill health condition, his previous efforts to regain health and return to work, job and social career) | Implicit in the framework but no explicit presentation | ∅ | The ICF definitions do not cover the development over time. |
| 4) Prognosis of disease and functional capacity | ∅ | Partly: capacity | The ICF framework and ICF definitions do not cover the time perspective. |
| 5) Feasibility of interventions and rehabilitation | Environmental factors | Environmental factors (facilitators and barriers) | The ICF framework and ICF definitions cover intervention and rehabilitation however; they do not cover dynamic time perspective or the qualification ‘requirement to comply’. |
| 6) Causality: functional incapacity exclusively caused by health condition | ∅ | ∅ | The ICF framework displays a person holistically |
| 7) Consistency of the situation of the claimant | Partly: between the impairments, activity limitations and restrictions in work | ∅ | |
| 8) Ability to work (in general hours and %) | ∅ | ∅ |
Legend: ∅ = not part of the ICF framework or the ICF definitions, *ICD: International Classification of Disability.