A medical review includes assessing impairment severity, the RFC, and related medical
issues. The MC or PC reviews the adjudicating component's medical assessment and may
independently arrive at a different assessment of impairment severity or RFC than
the adjudicating component. It is NOT a “de novo” review. If the adjudicating component’s
assessment complies with SSA disability program policy, and the evidence in file fully
supports and documents the assessment, the MC or PC must not substitute their judgment.
As part of their medical and response, the MC or PC should:
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respond to the medical referral completed by the quality reviewer requesting MC or
PC review, medical advice, or clarification of a medical issue and offer an explanation
or guidance as to the course of action recommended. The advice or recommendation should
be more detailed when it is not consistent with the reviewer’s guidance or possible
expectations,
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provide an opinion on probability of reversal (POR) determinations, as needed. MCs
and PCs must limit their opinions to the potential effect of missing documentation
on impairment severity or RFC only,
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complete appropriate forms to respond to the medical referral,
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code results of a medical review in the case processing system.
The documentation in the file must fully explain the discrepancy or disagreement with
the adjudicating component. MCs and PCs may prepare a SSA-3023-F3 (Medical Consultant's
Review of Psychiatric Review Technique Form), SSA-392 (Medical Consultant's Review
of Physical Residual Functional Capacity Assessment), or SSA-392-SUP (Medical Consultant's
Review of Mental Residual Functional Capacity Assessment), to express findings of
agreement or disagreement with an adjudicating component’s proposed PRT, RFC, or MRFC
assessment(s).
MCs and PCs generally prepare a SSA-416 to provide medical comments if a determination
should have been made on a medical-only basis (i.e., non-severe impairment(s) or impairment(s)
meets/equals a listing) or the case is insufficient to establish a severe medically
determinable impairment.
NOTE: For a discussion of “de novo” review and substitution of judgment, see QR 04440.003 - Explanation of Quality Review Terms and QR 04440.118 - Substitution of Judgment (SOJ) in the Quality Review Process.
1. When the PC should not use an SSA-3023-F3
The PC may not complete an SSA-3023-F3 when:
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the adjudicating component should have prepared a PRTF, but did not, or
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the PRTF in file is unsigned.
NOTE: The PC must use an SSA-416 (Case Analysis) to address the above issues. If the review
component assumes jurisdiction, the reviewing PC completes an SSA-2506-BK.
2. When the MC should not use an SSA-392
The MC may not complete an SSA-392 when:
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The adjudicating component prepared an SSA-4734-BK, but MC review establishes that
the adjudicating component should have made the disability determination on a medical
basis only (i.e., the impairment is a “not severe” physical impairment, or the impairment
is of listing-level severity), or
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The disability determination is not supported by sufficient evidence and additional
medical evidence is needed (i.e., a medical documentation deficiency), regardless
of whether the adjudicating component decided the case on a medical-vocational basis.
NOTE: For the above situations, the MC should record case analysis and disagreement(s)
with the RFC determination on an SSA-416. Otherwise, the reviewing MC will prepare
the assessment on an SSA-4734-BK when an RFC is not in the file, but one is required.
The reviewing MC should not use the SSA-392 to prepare an RFC assessment.
3. When the PC should not use an SSA-392-SUP
The PC may not complete an SSA-392-SUP when:
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The adjudicating component prepared an SSA-4734-F4-SUP, but PC review establishes
that the adjudicating component should have made the disability determination on a
medical basis only, (i.e., the impairment is a “not severe” mental impairment, or
the impairment is of listing-level severity.), or
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The disability determination is not supported by sufficient medical evidence and additional
medical evidence is needed (i.e., a medical documentation deficiency), regardless
of whether the adjudicating component decided the case on a medical-vocational basis.
NOTE: For situations above, the PC records case analysis and disagreement(s) with the MRFC
determination on an SSA-416, Case Analysis