Proposed Changes to the Department of Veterans Affairs Disability Rating Rubric for Mental Disorders

Objective:The U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) provides disability benefits for general medical and mental health conditions related to military service. Despite advances in conceptualization, assessment, and diagnosis of mental disorders, the current rating rubric used to determine the awar...

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Veröffentlicht in:Psychiatric services (Washington, D.C.) D.C.), 2023-06, Vol.74 (6), p.628-635
Hauptverfasser: Gianoli, Mayumi O., Meisler, Andrew W., Rosen, Marc I.
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container_title Psychiatric services (Washington, D.C.)
container_volume 74
creator Gianoli, Mayumi O.
Meisler, Andrew W.
Rosen, Marc I.
description Objective:The U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) provides disability benefits for general medical and mental health conditions related to military service. Despite advances in conceptualization, assessment, and diagnosis of mental disorders, the current rating rubric used to determine the award amounts received by veterans with posttraumatic stress disorder and other mental disorders has not been substantively revised since 1996. The VA recently proposed sweeping changes to the rating rubric for mental disorders, shifting the focus from a symptom-based algorithm to one based on functional impairment and bringing the rubric more in line with existing disability systems and guidelines.Methods:The authors examined the VA’s current symptom-based rating rubric and reviewed and analyzed the proposed changes, including a comparison with other rating systems used for mental disorders. Research on the relationship between psychiatric symptoms and functional impairment is also discussed.Results:Bringing examination procedures in line with the new function-based rating schedule will require significant changes to current standard practice for both examiners and Veterans Benefits Administration raters. The new rubric requires more specific definitions, anchors, and operationalization of the domains of function in the rating schedule to improve reliability and validity.Conclusions:The new system reflects an overdue shift away from a symptom-based formula toward real-world functioning. Concept study data suggest that the system may increase ratings for veterans awarded compensation, but the actual impact remains unknown. The authors discuss the implications of the new method for disability determination and offer suggestions for maximizing effective and fair implementation of the new rubric.
doi_str_mv 10.1176/appi.ps.20220377
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Despite advances in conceptualization, assessment, and diagnosis of mental disorders, the current rating rubric used to determine the award amounts received by veterans with posttraumatic stress disorder and other mental disorders has not been substantively revised since 1996. The VA recently proposed sweeping changes to the rating rubric for mental disorders, shifting the focus from a symptom-based algorithm to one based on functional impairment and bringing the rubric more in line with existing disability systems and guidelines.Methods:The authors examined the VA’s current symptom-based rating rubric and reviewed and analyzed the proposed changes, including a comparison with other rating systems used for mental disorders. Research on the relationship between psychiatric symptoms and functional impairment is also discussed.Results:Bringing examination procedures in line with the new function-based rating schedule will require significant changes to current standard practice for both examiners and Veterans Benefits Administration raters. The new rubric requires more specific definitions, anchors, and operationalization of the domains of function in the rating schedule to improve reliability and validity.Conclusions:The new system reflects an overdue shift away from a symptom-based formula toward real-world functioning. Concept study data suggest that the system may increase ratings for veterans awarded compensation, but the actual impact remains unknown. 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Despite advances in conceptualization, assessment, and diagnosis of mental disorders, the current rating rubric used to determine the award amounts received by veterans with posttraumatic stress disorder and other mental disorders has not been substantively revised since 1996. The VA recently proposed sweeping changes to the rating rubric for mental disorders, shifting the focus from a symptom-based algorithm to one based on functional impairment and bringing the rubric more in line with existing disability systems and guidelines.Methods:The authors examined the VA’s current symptom-based rating rubric and reviewed and analyzed the proposed changes, including a comparison with other rating systems used for mental disorders. 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source MEDLINE; American Psychiatric Publishing Journals (1997-Present); EZB-FREE-00999 freely available EZB journals
subjects Humans
Mental disorders
Mental Disorders - diagnosis
Mental health care
Post traumatic stress disorder
Reproducibility of Results
Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic - diagnosis
Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic - psychology
United States
United States Department of Veterans Affairs
Veterans - psychology
Veterans Disability Claims
Veterans health care
title Proposed Changes to the Department of Veterans Affairs Disability Rating Rubric for Mental Disorders
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