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Issue title: Disability Evaluation, Part II
Guest editors: Leonard D. EmondGuest Editor
Article type: Research Article
Authors: Jones, Frank E.*; 1;
Affiliations: 301 21st Avenue, North Nashville, Tennessee 37203, USA
Correspondence: [*] Orthopaedic Surgeon, Tennessee Orthopaedic Associates. Tel.: + 1 615 3296600. Fax: + 1 615 9633413.
Note: [1] Author's Note: The following article is not an original study. Rather, it outlines a method of calculating disability, using a formula which has been developed by others. The formula itself has no real scientific basis. The AMA Guides were not developed through scientific research, but were developed as a consensus document. Therefore, the usual format of a research article does not apply to this article, which simply describes how to utilize the guidelines.
Abstract: Determination of a fair and consistent permanent impairment rating is a very important part of the injured worker's care. This rating is a medical determination and is based on objective and consistent physical findings. Conversion of these findings into a percent of impairment is greatly facilitated by the use of guidelines which enable different examiners to be consistent in their determinations. The most widely used guide is the Guides to the Evaluation of Permanent Impairment, published by the American Medical Association. Disability is a legal determination which attempts to quantitate how the impairment will affect the injured person. Disability takes into account the worker's age, education, experience, and other social and economic factors. In the United States, disability is usually determined by the courts, while in other parts of the English-speaking world, the physician who does the impairment rating may be expected to estimate the disability as well as the impairment. This article will discuss some aspects of determination of impairment of the upper extremity, using the AMA Guides as the primary guideline.
Keywords: Disability evaluation, Extremity, upper, Amputation, Range of motion, articular, Neurologic evaluation
DOI: 10.3233/BMR-1997-8105
Journal: Journal of Back and Musculoskeletal Rehabilitation, vol. 8, no. 1, pp. 9-17, 1997
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