Current through Register Vol. 46, No. 39, September 25, 2024
(a) Aid to the
aged, blind or disabled or AABD means the combined program for providing
financial assistance, care and referral for services, exclusive of medical
assistance, to the following:
(1) individuals
65 years of age or older (OAA);
(2)
blind persons (AB); and
(3)
individuals, 18 years of age but less than 65 who are permanently and totally
disabled (AD).
(b) Blind
means that the individual is totally without or has impaired vision of not more
than 20/200 visual acuity in the better eye and for whom a diagnosis and
medical findings show that vision cannot be improved to better than 20/200; or
who has loss of vision due wholly or in part to impairment of field vision or
to other factors which affect the usefulness of vision to a like
degree.
(c) Permanently and totally
disabled means that the individual has a permanent physical or mental
impairment, disease; or loss, or combination thereof that substantially
precludes him from engaging in useful occupations within his competence, such
as holding a job or performing homemaking.
(1)
Permanently refers to a condition which is not likely to improve or which will
continue throughout the life time of the individual; it may be a condition
which is not likely to respond to any known therapeutic procedure, or a
condition which is likely to remain static or to become worse unless certain
therapeutic measures are carried out, where treatment is unavailable,
inadvisable, or is refused by the individual on a reasonable basis;
"permanently" does not rule out the possibility of vocational rehabilitation or
even possible recovery in light of future medical advances or changed
prognosis; in this sense the term refers to a condition which continues
indefinitely as distinct from one which is temporary or transient.
(2) Totally involves considerations in
addition to those verified through the medical findings, such as age, training
skills, and work experience and the probable functioning of the individual in
his particular situation in light of his impairment; an individual's disability
would usually be tested in relation to ability to engage in remunerative
employment; the ability to keep house or to care for others would be the
appropriate test for (and only for) individuals, such as housewives, who were
engaged in this occupation prior to the disability and do have a history of
gainful employment; eligibility may continue even after a period of
rehabilitation and readjustment, if the individual's work capacity is still
very considerably limited (in comparison with that of a normal person) in terms
of such factors as the speed with which he can work, the amount he can produce
in a given time, and the number of hours he is able to work.
(3)
(i)
Group I. Individuals having permanent impairments which are totally disabling
and definitely irreversible. This classification includes persons who show no
possibility of engaging in a useful occupation but who are under medical
supervision engaging in motivated activity or in an occupational therapy
program.
(ii) Group II. Individuals
having permanent impairments which, while totally disabling at the time of
initial determination, are such that the condition may be arrested or a
remission may occur, or for which therapeutic advances are occurring or where
rehabilitation is deemed feasible. Group II designation is limited to those
persons who are expected to show a change in physical or mental status or
improved functioning which will enable them to become capable of useful
employment.
(4) Terminal
illness. An illness in its final stage which:
(i) cannot benefit from further treatment;
and
(ii) is expected to lead to
progressive physical and/or mental deterioration; and
(iii) is expected to cause the patient's
death in a relatively short period of time.
(5) Completely helpless. A condition of
permanent impairment of such severity confirmed by medical judgment that a
person must remain confined indefinitely in his or her home or a medical
institution.
(6) Review team means
technically competent persons, not less than a physician and a social worker
qualified by professional training and pertinent experience, acting
cooperatively, employed by the department or designated by the department, who
are responsible for the agency's decision that the applicant does or does not
meet the State's definition of permanent and total disability, based on the
evaluation of the medical report and social history.
(i) The medical report shall include a
substantiated diagnosis, based either on existing medical evidence or upon
current medical examination;
(ii)
The social history shall contain sufficient information to make it possible to
relate the medical findings to the activities of the "useful occupation" and to
determine whether the individual is totally disabled.
(7) Useful occupation means gainful
employment and homemaking.
(i) Employment.
Employment as a useful occupation refers to a full-time job for which the
person is compensated at the prevailing wages in the community. It excludes
hobbies, activities which do not provide a bona fide job opportunity, activity
which if discontinued by the individual would not require someone to be hired
as a replacement, and activities primarily of therapeutic or rehabilitative
nature. It also excludes those situations where the severely handicapped person
through diligent effort does some work or where sympathy or compassion of
others provides the opportunity to engage in remunerative work or where the
energy output of the handicapped person is far beyond that which is ordinarily
required for that activity or where it takes him substantially more time to do
the work than a normal person. It does not necessarily exclude persons employed
in a sheltered workshop.
(ii)
Homemaking. Homemaking as a useful occupation involves ability to carry major
home management and decision-making responsibilities and provide essential
service within the home for at least one person, in addition to one's
self.
(iii) Homemaker. A person who
resides alone shall not be evaluated as a homemaker. Only those individuals,
such as housewives, who were engaged in this occupation prior to the disability
and who do not have a history of gainful employment are to be evaluated as
homemakers.
(8)
Substantially precludes means the inability of a person to perform activities
related to gainful employment well enough for a sufficient number of hours or
with sufficient regularity to receive regular payment for the employment; or in
the case of the homemaker, the person is unable to perform regularly a
significant combination of the activities required of a homemaker within
acceptable standards. There shall be sufficient medical and social data to
support the person's inability to perform on a predictable basis any job for
which he has competence and which exists in the community.
(9) Competence means the ability to perform
the activities required by a useful occupation for which the individual is
fitted by age, background, skills, training, education or work
experience.
(10) A job which exists
in the community is one within an area which is reasonably accessible rather
than in the immediate neighborhood of the disabled person's home. However,
whether it is feasible for a handicapped person to accept a specific job within
the larger employment area will depend on such factors as its distance from his
home, what methods of transportation are available and his ability to use such
form of transportation, the time consumed in travel and the cost.