Title: Allen W. Heinemann, PhD, ABPP
1Disability Determination Process The Need for
Fundamental Change
- Allen W. Heinemann, PhD, ABPP
- Professor, Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation
- Feinberg School of Medicine, Northwestern
University - Director, Center for Rehabilitation Outcomes
Research - Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago
2The Need for Fundamental Change
- Social Security Advisory Board January 2001
- Major concerns described in report
- Growth in disability claims threaten to overwhelm
the system - Inadequate tools exist to make disability
determination decisions. - Public perceptions of inequity
- Unexplained variations in decision making exposes
the disability programs to accusations that
decisions are not made uniformly and consistently - Four years later, that need still exists
35-Step Sequential Disability Determination Process
4Appeals Process
Initial DDS Determination
Source Social Security Advisory Board, January
2001.
5Appeals Burden
- Average appeal 525 days due to backlogged cases
- 628 days to move through the process
- Total appeals time 1,153 days roughly 3 years
and 2 months - Additional time required to navigate through the
initial decision
Source Honorable Jo Anne B. Barnhart,
Commissioner of Social Security. Testimony before
the House Ways and Means Committee, 9/25/03
6Costs of Appeals
- Many claimants give up and drop out of the system
- For those who dont give up, most ultimately
receive benefits - 59 of all appeals are reversed by OHA
- Additional claims are paid as claims continue
their way through the remaining stages of the
appeals process
7OHA Appeals Outcome
- Large numbers of decisions reversed by ALJs
illustrate the complexity in the decision process
and opportunities for disagreement
- Worsening medical conditions and the opportunity
to meet claimants in person may account for some
of these reversals - However, minor variations do not explain why the
same information being viewed by two different
systems often results in radically different
conclusions
8Disability Research Institute Project
- Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago /
Northwestern University researchers are
evaluating the functional and occupational
factors that affect claim decisions - Goal Inform SSA regarding factors that affect
different decisions reached by DDS and OHA,
particularly at Steps 4 and 5
9Project Design and Sample
- Cross-sectional national sample of disability
applications from 2002 - Claims under listings for
- Affective disorders (12.04)
- Anxiety-related disorders (12.06)
- Personality disorders (12.08)
- Stratified by state, age, and benefits decision
10SSA Forms for Data Extraction
- 831 Disability Determination Transmittal
- 3367 Disability Report, Field Office
- 3368 Disability Report
- 3369 Vocational Report
- 101 Determination of Award
- 561 Request for Reconsideration
- 3341 Reconsideration Disability Report
- 501 Request for Hearing by ALJ
- 1696 Appointment of Representative
- 4734 Physical Residual Functional Capacity
Assessment - 4734-F4-SUP Mental Residual Functional Capacity
Assessment - 2506 Psychiatric Review Technique Form
11Unprecedented Opportunity
- Use of primary folder data is the first of its
kind - Previously, no other researchers have had direct
access to information necessary to conduct an
evaluation of the disability determination
process - All researchers must undergo background/security
screenings - All IRS information (i.e., wages and other
earnings) must be removed before data can be
accessed.
12Data Analysis
- Classification and Regression Tree Analysis
(CART) - Use existing data to predict state DDS disability
award decisions and ALJ decisions - Identify what factors influence a claimants
decisions to appeal - Determine if the mental RFC instrument yields a
reliable and valid measure, or if subsets of
items form better measures - Identify what characteristics distinguish awards
at step 3 from awards at steps 4 and 5 - Determine how well the Adult Needs and Strengths
Assessment (ANSA) instrument predicts disability
decisions
13Implications Next Steps
- Based on findings, a larger sample may be needed
to explain variability by region and other issues
that may be revealed. - It has been suggested that some claimants might
be less willing return to work because it took so
long to receive benefits. - We hope this study will help create a more fair,
equitable, and streamlined system that also
promotes return to work.