Source: http://www.federalregister.com/Browse/Document/usa/na/fr/2003/8/28/03-22016
Timestamp: 2019-03-23 03:27:33
Document Index: 727887772

Matched Legal Cases: ['§ 416', '§ 416', '§ 404', '§ 404', '§ 404', 'art 404', '§ 416', '§ 404', '§ 404', '§ 404', '§ 416', '§ 416', '§ 416', '§ 416', '§ 416', '§ 416', '§ 416', '§ 416']

68 FR 167 pgs. 51689-51693 - Revised Medical Criteria for Evaluating Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis
Years > 2003 > August, 2003 > Thursday, August 28, 2003
Type: RULEVolume: 68Number: 167Pages: 51689 - 51693
FR document: [FR Doc. 03-22016 Filed 8-27-03; 8:45 am]
RIN 0960-AF95
Revised Medical Criteria for Evaluating Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis
We are revising the criteria in the Listing of Impairments (the listings) that we use to evaluate Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS). We apply these criteria when you claim benefits based on disability under title II or title XVI of the Social Security Act (the Act). The revision provides that we will find you disabled if you have medical evidence showing that you have ALS.
Because of this change, we are also adding guidance about ALS to our listings. We are also adding ALS to the list of specific impairment categories in our regulation that provides for presumptive disability payments under title XVI.
These rules are effective August 28, 2003.
Martin Sussman, Regulations Officer, Social Security Administration, 100 Altmeyer Building, 6401 Security Boulevard, Baltimore, Maryland 21235-6401, (410) 965-1767 or TTY (410) 966-5609. For information on eligibility or filing for benefits, call our national toll-free number, 1-800-772-1213 or TTY 1-800-325-0778, or visit our Internet Web site, Social Security Online, at http://www.socialsecurity.gov.
Electronic Version: The electronic file of this document is available on the date of publication in the Federal Register at http://www.gpoaccess.gov/fr/index.html. It is also available on the Internet site for SSA ( i.e. , Social Security Online): http://www.socialsecurity.gov/regulations.
For the reasons we explain below, we are revising listing 11.10, our listing for ALS, in our neurological body system listings. The new listing provides that we will find you disabled if you have medical evidence that shows that you have ALS. Because of this change, we are also making two additional changes:
• We are adding a new section 11.00G to the introductory material to the neurological listings to provide information about ALS and the evidence we need so that we can evaluate ALS under the new listing.
• We are amending § 416.934 of our regulations to include ALS on the list of "specific impairment categories" our field offices and State agencies use to make findings of presumptive disability under the Supplemental Security Income (SSI) program. This change will allow us to make findings of presumptive disability in claims involving allegations of ALS, without obtaining any medical evidence. We are also making a nonsubstantive technical change to the specific impairment category for Down syndrome in § 416.934, so that the category reflects the current terminology for the condition.
What Programs Do These Final Regulations Affect?
These final regulations affect disability determinations and decisions that we make under title II and title XVI of the Act. In addition, to the extent that Medicare entitlement and Medicaid eligibility are based on whether you qualify for disability benefits under title II or title XVI, these final regulations also affect the Medicare and Medicaid programs.
• Widows, widowers, and surviving divorced spouses ( see § 404.336) of insured workers.
Under title XVI of the Act, we provide for SSI payments on the basis of disability if you are disabled and have limited income and resources.
Under both the title II and title XVI programs, the Act says that disability must be the result of any medically determinable physical or mental impairment or combination of impairments that is expected to result in death or which has lasted or is expected to last for a continuous period of at least 12 months. Our definitions of disability are shown in the following table:
Disability means you have a medically determinable impairment(s) as described above and that results in . . .
To decide whether you are disabled under the Act, we use a five-step "sequential evaluation process," which we describe in our regulations at §§ 404.1520 and 416.920. We follow the five steps in order and stop as soon as we can make a determination or decision. The steps are:
4. Does your impairment(s) prevent you from doing your past relevant work? If it does not, we will find that you are not disabled. If it does, we will go on to step 5.
5. Does your impairment(s) prevent you from doing any other work, considering your residual functional capacity, age, education, and work experience? If it does, and it meets the duration requirement, we will find that you are disabled. If it does not, we will find that you are not disabled.
We use different sequential evaluation processes for children who apply for disability payments under SSI and, if you are already receiving benefits, when we are deciding whether your disability continues. See §§ 404.1594, 416.424, 416.994, and 416.994a of our regulations. However, all of these different processes also include steps that consider whether your impairment meets or medically equals one of our listings.
The listings are examples of impairments that we consider severe enough to prevent you as an adult from doing any gainful activity. If you are a child seeking SSI benefits based on disability, the listings describe impairments that we consider severe enough to result in marked and severe functional limitations. Although the listings are contained only in appendix 1 to subpart P of part 404 of our rules, we incorporate them by reference in the SSI program in § 416.925 of our regulations, and apply them to claims under both title II and title XVI of the Act.
If you are an individual under age 18, we first use the criteria in part B of the listings. If the listings in part B criteria do not apply, and the specific disease process(es) has a similar effect on adults and children, we then use the criteria in part A. (See §§ 404.1525 and 416.925.)
If your impairment(s) does not meet any listing, we will also consider whether it medically equals any listing; that is, whether it is as medically severe. (See §§ 404.1526 and 416.926.)
We use the listings only to decide that individuals are disabled or that they are still disabled. We will never deny your claim because your impairment(s) does not meet or medically equal a listing. If you are not working and you have a severe impairment(s) that does not meet or medically equal any listing, we may still find you disabled based on other rules in the sequential evaluation process that we use to evaluate all disability claims. Likewise, we will never decide that you no longer qualify for benefits because your impairment(s) does not meet or medically equal a listing.
Also, when we conduct reviews to determine whether your disability continues, we will not find that your disability has ended because we have changed a listing. Our regulations explain that, when we change our listings, we continue to use our prior listings when we review your case, if you qualified for disability benefits or SSI payments based on our determination or decision that your impairment(s) met or medically equaled the listings. In these cases, we determine whether you have experienced medical improvement, and if so, whether the medical improvement is related to the ability to work. If your condition(s) has medically improved so that you no longer meet or medically equal the prior listing, we evaluate your case further to determine whether you are currently disabled. We may find that you are currently disabled, depending on the full circumstances of your case. See §§ 404.1594(c)(3)(i) and 416.994(b)(2)(iv)(A). If you are a child who is eligible for SSI payments, we follow a similar rule when we decide whether you have experienced medical improvement in your condition(s). See § 416.994a(b)(2).
ALS, sometimes called Lou Gehrig's disease, is a progressive, invariably fatal neurological disease that attacks the nerve cells (motor neurons) responsible for controlling voluntary muscles.
ALS most commonly strikes people between 40 and 60 years of age. The diagnosis of ALS is based on history, clinical findings, and electrophysiological and neuroimaging studies. It is also arrived at by ruling out the existence of other neurological disorders that may have similar effects, such as neuropathy.
Eventually, all muscles under voluntary control are affected and individuals with ALS ultimately lose the ability to move their arms and legs, and the capacity to effectively swallow, speak, and breathe. Most people with ALS die from respiratory failure, usually within 3 to 5 years from the onset of symptoms. There is currently no cure for ALS.
What Did the Prior Listing for ALS Require?
The prior listing for ALS, listing 11.10, required that you have ALS with either:
• "Significant bulbar signs" (listing 11.10A) or
• "Disorganization of motor function as described in 11.04B" (listing 11.10B).
"Significant bulbar signs" include difficulty in the ability to chew, swallow, and speak. Listing 11.04B requires "[s]ignificant and persistent disorganization of motor function in two extremities, resulting in sustained disturbance of gross and dexterous movements, or gait and station"; in other words, inability to use both of your upper extremities effectively or to walk effectively.
Why Are We Revising the Listing for ALS?
We are revising listing 11.10 because we have determined that it is not necessary to include the requirements in paragraphs A and B of prior listing 11.10. We expect that these final rules will simplify and expedite our adjudication of claims filed by individuals with ALS.
We receive very few applications based on ALS, and we approve almost all of them at the first level of our decisionmaking process. For example, in calendar year 2002 we received a total of only 1,384 claims based on ALS under titles II and XVI, and the State agencies that review disability claims for us allowed 1,324, or almost 96 percent of them, at the initial level of our administrative review process. The vast majority of the people who appealed their initial determinations denying their claims were also found disabled. In 2002, the State agencies found disabled about 80 percent of the people with claims based on ALS who asked for a reconsideration of their initial determinations. There were similar approval rates for every year since 1999.
There has also been significant Congressional action to help people with ALS qualify for benefits and services as quickly as possible. For example, in 2000, Congress amended the Act to provide that people who are disabled with ALS do not have to wait until they have received benefit payments under title II for 24 months before they can qualify for Medicare, as do all other people who are entitled to disability benefits under title II. See section 226(h) of the Act. These rules will help some people who are disabled with ALS to qualify for Medicare sooner.
We have decided that the simplest and fastest way to process claims of individuals with ALS without sacrificing the quality of our disability determinations and decisions is to revise the listing to provide that anyone who shows that he or she has ALS, established by clinical and laboratory findings, will be found disabled.
Why Are We Adding ALS to § 416.934 of Our Regulations?
The Act and our regulations provide that we may make SSI payments to you for up to 6 months on the basis of presumptive disability before we make a formal determination about whether you are disabled. You must also meet all other eligibility requirements before we may make presumptive disability payments. See section 1631(a)(4) of the Act and § 416.932 of our regulations. (There are no provisions in the Act that would allow us to make presumptive disability payments under title II.) Under § 416.933 of our regulations, we explain that we make these payments if there is a high degree of probability that we will find that you are disabled when we make our formal determination. If our formal determination is that you are not disabled, the Act provides that you do not have to pay us back.
We may make findings of presumptive disability with or without medical evidence. Section 416.934 of our regulations provides a list of "specific impairment categories" that we use to find presumptive disability without medical evidence. For example, we may make a finding of presumptive disability without medical evidence based on an allegation of Down syndrome. A person meets a listing for Down syndrome (10.06 or 110.06) simply by showing medical evidence establishing that he or she has non-mosaic Down syndrome. Therefore, there is a high degree of probability that we will find people who allege Down syndrome disabled. The new rules for ALS are similar. There is a high degree of probability that we will find people who have ALS disabled when we make our formal determination because everyone who applies for SSI and who has medical evidence showing that they have ALS will be found disabled under revised listing 11.10.
We will apply the final rules starting today.
As is our usual practice when we make changes to our regulations, we will apply these final rules to the claims of applicants for benefits that are pending at any stage of our administrative review process, including any claims that are pending administrative review after remand from a Federal court.
We are adding a new section 11.00G to the introductory material in the neurological body system section of our listings. The new section contains three paragraphs. Section 11.00G1 provides some basic information about ALS. Sections 11.00G2 and 11.00G3 provide information about how ALS is diagnosed and the information we need to establish that you meet the requirements of revised listing 11.10. The language of paragraphs 11.00G2 and 11.00G3 is based on language we use in the introductory material to the Down syndrome listings (sections 10.00A and B, and 110.00A and B) and the introductory material to our immune system listings regarding documentation of HIV infection (sections 14.00D and 114.00D).
We are revising listing 11.10 to provide that, if you have a diagnosis of ALS established by the medical evidence described in section 11.00G, we will find that you are disabled. We are not adding a corresponding listing in part B of our listings, the listings we use to evaluate people who are under 18 years old, because ALS is rare in children. We will use revised listing 11.10 to evaluate all people with ALS, including people who are under age 18, as we did under the prior listing.
As already noted, we are also adding a new paragraph (i) to § 416.934 to allow us to make findings of presumptive disability without medical evidence in cases involving allegations of ALS. Together with this addition, we are also making minor editorial changes for context and to update one of our rules. We needed to revise paragraph (g) near the end of prior § 416.934 to remove the word "and" at the end of the section because paragraph (h) is no longer the last paragraph in the section. In addition, we are changing the language of paragraph (g) from "Allegation of Down's syndrome (Mongolism)" to "Allegation of Down syndrome." This is the current terminology for the condition.
Pursuant to section 702(a)(5) of the Act, 42 U.S.C. 902(a)(5), the Social Security Administration follows the Administrative Procedure Act (APA) rulemaking procedures specified in 5 U.S.C. 553 in the development of its regulations. The APA provides exceptions to its Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) procedures when an agency finds that there is good cause for dispensing with such procedures on the basis that they are impracticable, unnecessary, or contrary to the public interest. In the case of these rules, we have determined that, under 5 U.S.C. 553(b)(B), good cause exists for waiving the NPRM procedures.
As we have noted above, we receive very few claims each year based on ALS. In light of the nature of ALS, we find disabled at the initial level of our administrative review process about 96 percent of people who apply for disability benefits under title II and title XVI based on the condition. Many of the remaining few people whose claims are denied initially are found disabled on appeal. Ultimately, we find that almost all people who apply based on ALS are disabled. We expect that the changes we are making in these rules will simplify and expedite our processing of claims based on ALS. The main differences between these rules and our prior rules are that a small number of people who would be required to appeal an unfavorable determination under our prior rules will no longer have to do so, and a very small number of people whose claims were denied incorrectly under our prior rules will now properly be found to be disabled. Consequently, we find that prior notice and comment is unnecessary with respect to these rules.
We also find that good cause exists for waiving the APA's notice-and-comment rulemaking procedures because use of notice-and-comment rulemaking procedures would be contrary to the public interest. In light of the serious consequences caused by ALS, ultimately, we find that almost all people who apply for disability benefits based on the condition are disabled. The serious consequences caused by ALS are also reflected in Congress' judgment, set out in section 226(h) of the Act, to eliminate for individuals who are disabled with ALS the normal 24-month Medicare waiting period that applies to people who are found disabled under title II of the Act. The changes we are making in these rules will allow us to make more timely determinations of disability for individuals with a progressive and invariably fatal disorder. The changes we are making in these rules will also help to implement Congress' judgment that individuals who are disabled under title II of the Act based on ALS should also receive immediate entitlement to Medicare rather than having to wait 24 months. It is critical that we issue these rules as soon as possible so that more people can qualify as quickly as possible for Medicare benefits and other services. Likewise, the small number of individuals who file applications for SSI will be able to benefit from the presumptive eligibility provisions of these rules. For these reasons, we find that use of the APA's notice-and-comment rulemaking procedures is contrary to the public interest in this instance.
In addition, we find good cause for dispensing with the 30-day delay in the effective date of a substantive rule, as provided for by 5 U.S.C. 553(d)(3). For the reasons that we have discussed above, we find that it is in the public interest to make these rules effective upon publication.
These final rules contain reporting requirements at sections 11.00G and 11.10. The public reporting burden is accounted for in the Information Collection Requests for the various forms that the public uses to submit the information to SSA. Consequently, a 1-hour placeholder burden is being assigned to the specific reporting requirement(s) contained in these rules. We are seeking clearance of the burden referenced in these rules because the rules were not considered during the clearance of the forms. An Information Collection Request has been submitted to OMB. We are soliciting comments on the burden estimate; the need for the information; its practical utility; ways to enhance its quality, utility and clarity; and on ways to minimize the burden on respondents, including the use of automated collection techniques or other forms of information technology. Comments should be submitted to the Office of Management and Budget at the following fax number and to the Social Security Administration at the following address or fax number:
Administrative practice and procedure, Aged, Blind, Disability benefits, Public assistance programs, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Supplemental Security Income.
2. Add new section 11.00G to section 11.00 in part A of appendix 1 and revise section 11.10 to read as follows:
11.00Neurological
G. Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS). 1. Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), sometimes called Lou Gehrig's disease, is a progressive, invariably fatal neurological disease that attacks the nerve cells (motor neurons) responsible for controlling voluntary muscles. Eventually, all muscles under voluntary control are affected, and individuals with ALS ultimately lose their ability to move their arms and legs, and their capacity to swallow, speak, and breath. Most people with ALS die from respiratory failure. There is currently no cure for ALS, and most treatments are designed only to relieve symptoms and improve the quality of life.
11.10 Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis established by clinical and laboratory findings, as described in 11.00G.
Secs. 702(a)(5), 1611, 1614, 1619, 1631(a), (c), and (d)(1), and 1633 of the Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. 902(a)(5), 1382, 1382c, 1382h, 1383(a), (c), and (d)(1), and 1383b); secs. 4(c) and 5, 6(c)-(e), 14(a), and 15, Pub. L. 98-460, 98 Stat. 1794, 1801, 1802, and 1808 (42 U.S.C. 421 note, 423 note, 1382h note).
4. In § 416.934, revise paragraph (g) and add new paragraph (i) to read as follows:
§ 416.934 Impairments which may warrant a finding of presumptive disability or presumptive blindness.
[FR Doc. 03-22016 Filed 8-27-03; 8:45 am]