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John Kuhnlein ,DO, MPH, CIME, FACPM, FACOEM

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Title: John Kuhnlein ,DO, MPH, CIME, FACPM, FACOEM


1
  • John Kuhnlein ,DO, MPH, CIME, FACPM, FACOEM
  • Medix Occupational Health
  • Ankeny Iowa

2
Energy in the executive is a leading character
in the definition of good government. A feeble
executive implies a feeble execution of
government. A feeble execution is but another
phrase for a bad execution and a government ill
executed, whatever it may be in theory, must be,
in practice, a bad government.
Alexander Hamilton, Federalist Papers, No. 70
3
Energy in editorial control is a leading
character in the definition of a good Guides. A
feeble or misguided editorial control implies a
feeble execution of the Guides. A feeble
execution is but another phrase for a bad Guides
and a Guides ill executed, whatever it may be in
theory, must be, in practice, a bad Guides.
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So what do you need to know about the 6th Edition?
  • The Iowa Task Force regarding the use of the 6th
    Edition voted against its use in Iowa, and Ill
    try to explain my thoughts about this. You can
    view the report at the Iowa Workforce Development
    website.
  • One can look at this position in a number of
    ways
  • Wait and Watch what happens in other states prior
    to considering implementation
  • Not never, just not now
  • Never in its current iteration and format

7
The 6th Edition uses 5 new axioms for impairment
rating (2)
  • The Guides adopts the terminology and conceptual
    framework of the International Classification of
    Functioning, Disability and Health (ICF) Fig 1-1
    (3) Old model 5th Fig 1-1 (8)
  • The Guides becomes more diagnosis based

8
The 6th Edition uses 5 new axioms for impairment
rating (2)
  • Simplicity, ease-of-application, and following
    precedent, where applicable, are given high
    priority, with the goal of optimizing interrater
    and intrarater reliability (italics added)
  • Rating percentages functionally based
  • Conceptual and methodological congruity within
    and between organ system ratings

9
Some of the basics -
  • The Guides originally came from a series of
    articles in JAMA from 1958-1970 The
    First Edition of The Guides
  • Subsequent Editions have been evolutionary in
    approach the 6th is revolutionary, using a very
    different model, not only conceptually, but in
    how ratings are practically derived.

10
So whats different?
  • In the other Editions, we took the injury apart
    into range of motion, motor, sensory, ligamentous
    structure, sometimes DRE and then combined them
    back into the impairment-it was mostly based on
    the physical examination regardless of diagnosis,
    most of the time

11
So whats different? Remember this is simple and
easy.
  • Radically different methodology based on a
    Clinical Diagnostic Class (CDX), which assigns
    impairment to the median value in a grid of
    impairments, with several exceptions.
  • The CDX is then modified using the Net Adjustment
    Formula (NAF) using modifiers for functional
    history, physical examination, and diagnostic
    studies (GMFH-CDX)(GMPE-CDX)(GMCS- CDX)

12
So whats different? Remember ease-of-application!
  • This model is used most of the time, except for
  • mental health,
  • carpal tunnel syndrome, Table 15-23, (449)
  • sometimes upper extremity, (amputation, some CDX
    3 and 4 injuries) (461) and
  • sometimes lower extremity (amputation, some CDX 3
    and 4 injuries) (543)

13
The 5th is far from perfect
  • No real scientific support for impairment rating
    values always has been a consensus process.
  • If the doctor doesnt read the book, significant
    errors may ensue.
  • Open the book, look at a few tables and use one
    of the numbers to assign a rating. Some docs
    dont even do this much.
  • The doctors dont mention the tables and pages so
    the reader can follow where the numbers are
    coming from.

14
The 5th is far from perfect
  • Lack of internal consistency-visual system
    ratings arent consistent with the MSK chapter
    ratings.
  • Sometimes there are significant gaps between DRE
    impairments-whats wrong with 3? It jumps from
    0 (DRE I) to 5 (DRE II) Fig 15-3, page 384
  • Sometimes major nerves are missing, e.g. in the
    lower extremity, Table 17-31, Page 544

15
The 5th is far from perfect
  • In the case of multiple spine surgeries- you use
    the ROM method (379-380), but the numbers come
    out LOWER than if you only have one surgery.
    With one surgery only cervical fusion is minimum
    25 BAW Fig 15-5 392
  • Mental health issues have no ordinal values

16
The 6th has some advantages
  • The spine gaps are filled in
  • Nerves are addressed that werent before
  • There is a methodology for rating mental health
    issues-although in error originally. Recently
    corrected in the first 52 page errata.
  • Tendinitis/epicondylitis handled now
  • May be a bit more straightforward if the strict
    methodology is followed, although the exceptions
    are significant and confusing.

17
The 6th Edition has issues
  • So many issues, so little time
  • THE PARADIGM SHIFT
  • What is a paradigm shift
  • Who voted to say we needed a paradigm shift in
    the first place?
  • By physicians for physicians but
  • AMA was threatened by lawsuit by ACA if the
    wording didnt change
  • No one asked the end users (e.g. the workers
    compensation users) if needed or wanted at all.
    It doesnt appear that the true impact on the end
    users was considered
  • Methodology includes disability issues so mixing
    impairment with disability measures

18
The 6th Edition has issues
  • THE PARADIGM SHIFT
  • Despite the editors assertions that this edition
    of the Guides will move the process forward
    there are still practical issues of
    implementation that, if considered, dont seem to
    have been considered important.

19
The 6th Edition has issues
  • THE PARADIGM SHIFT
  • May produce untoward and unexpected outcomes or
    harm to either party the 2006 injury vs. the
    2008 and outcomes. 25 v. 6, MH issues
  • There doesnt seem to be a mechanism in place to
    assess /- impact for adaptation. Rondinelli
    comment 2/1/08 re AMA actuarials

20
The 6th Edition has issues
  • THE PARADIGM SHIFT
  • Do No Harm principle - issues of harm to
    employee, multistate employer, physicians
  • Physicians who write Guides forget common sense.
    They get bound up in methodology, testify as to
    science, and studies, but forget to step back and
    look at this as a social process. We hear about
    studies and evidence based medicine, but no
    comment upon real implementation problems and
    issues

21
The 6th Edition has issues
  • THE PARADIGM SHIFT
  • My view intriguing concept, but
  • Iowa should wait and watch. Let sister states
    who mandate use find out if this paradigm is
    usable and then reevaluate.
  • Not never, just not now.

22
The 6th Edition has issues
  • Changes in Ordinal Values- Untoward and
    Unexpected Outcomes
  • Cervical Fusion ratings may be dramatically
    different. 5th 25-28 DRE. 6th may be 6 or 0
    BAW. Table 17-2 page 564.
  • Mental health now present so ratings here may go
    up. You have numbers where you didnt before.
  • Tendinitis
  • Uncertain whether certain conditions change
    dramatically, if overall ratings go up/down

23
The 6th Edition has issues
  • Cultural and Racial Issues
  • Reported to Task Force that QuickDASH, AAOS, PDQ
    not culturally sensitive.
  • People of culture are often also people of
    different race.
  • Because of the way the questionnaires are used,
    there may be either an advantage or disadvantage
    to people of culture and color. See pp. 446-447
    6th Edition re QuickDASH scoring.

24
The 6th Edition has issues
  • Physician Issues
  • Carpal Tunnel syndrome can be diagnosed using one
    set of EMG/NCV criteria but is rated using
    another set of EMG/NCV criteria. This creates a
    double standard. (446)
  • Physicians may see complaints to state Boards of
    Medicine for unnecessary surgery. Maybe not.
  • Task Force was told that the EMG/NCV standards
    outlined in Appendix 15-B were determined by
    consensus. They are not the criteria from AMA
    component societies. But AMA says it wants Guides
    to be more objective. Seems this is not.

25
The 6th Edition has issues
  • Physician Issues
  • The learning curve
  • 8 hour course work at several hundred dollars
    expense if not more because of travel expenses.
  • Dr. Melhorn indicated about 25-30 hours necessary
    to learn on your own.
  • If physicians simply pick up the book and look at
    tables and figures, the errors will increase,
    with increased case cost.
  • Will fewer physicians do ratings?

26
The 6th Edition has issues
  • Physician Issues
  • 52 page errata took 3.5 hours for one Task Force
    member to correct with the 6th Edition, i.e., the
    11 cm PDQ line, the MH BPRS
  • More errata may be coming, uncertain now.
  • If physicians who rarely use the book dont
    review and correct with the errata, error rates
    will go up
  • If the reader doesnt know if the physician was
    aware of the latest errata, confusion will ensue
    as to whether the rating is incorrect. Was the
    reader aware of the most recent errata?

27
The 6th Edition has issues
  • Consensus
  • Editorial Issues
  • Dr. Rondinelli 85/15 issues
  • Dr. Mueller listing issues
  • Dr. Colledge issues
  • Dr. Douglas Martin issues brought to Task Force
  • hidden agendas and biased allegiances which many
    physicians (involved in the development of the
    Sixth Edition) cannot say
  • Dr. Brigham issues

28
The 6th Edition has issues
  • Bias? Unattributed statements in the text,
    unrelated to impairment issues per se
  • Mental health impairment limited to one
    diagnosis(349) Malingering T. 14-3, (350)
  • UE three nerve issue (448)
  • MMI at two stable OVs one month apart after CTR
    (447)

29
The 6th Edition has issues
  • Bias? Unattributed statements in the text,
    unrelated to impairment issues per se
  • Unreferenced LE CRPS comments re incorrect
    (539) Table 16-15 (541), also see bibliography
    preliminary, proposed
  • Issues related to excluding GMFH (LE 516), GMPE
    (LE 517), and GMCS values (UE 448 re postop
    EMG/NCV)

30
The 6th Edition has issues
  • Consensus and bias
  • Who wrote the chapters? We couldnt find out.
  • Who were the authors who
  • Might have hidden agendas and biased
    allegiances who
  • Made up the consensus that
  • Created the paradigm shift with the
  • Potential cultural/racial issues that
  • Might create problems for physicians?
  • And why did this book get hurried in the rush to
    publish, and who made the corrections
  • Published in the 52 page errata that had to be
  • Rushed to publish because of the original
  • Rush to publish a version weve been told is
  • A beta version?

31
The 6th Edition has issues
  • Interrater Reliability
  • Editors mentioned this several times in
    discussions with the Task Force
  • So what? The deck is stacked anyway.
  • There will be greater interrater reliability
    because there are essentially only five choices
    anyway based on the CDX

32
The 6th Edition has issues
  • Interrater Reliability
  • Problem is accuracy in ratings not interrater
    reliability which comes back to the consensus.
  • If the consensus is biased, the data in the grids
    is bad.
  • If the data in the grids is bad then the ratings
    are bad. Physicians can all come up with the
    same number but if the data is bad, then the
    rating is bad, it will still be an incorrect
    number

33
The 6th Edition has issues
  • Simplicity and ease of use
  • Remember that there are occasions when the GMFH,
    the GMPE, and the GMCS can be disregarded, based
    on the particular scenario.
  • Remember that you can have objective physical
    findings that can DECREASE the rating.

34
Summary
  • Wait and Watch the 6th implementation in other
    states. Basically let other states find out if
    these are all valid concerns.
  • There is no harm in waiting.
  • Not never, just not now.

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