Hansen's Disease
Comment: A few commenters thought
that there are still sufficient cases of Hansen's disease to warrant its
retention in the listings.
Response: We did not adopt the
comment. The incidence (new cases per year) of Hansen's disease (leprosy)
in the United States is very low, less than 135 in the past few years.
Moreover, we do not need a separate listing because the dermatological and
neurological manifestations of this disorder are addressed in the sections
pertaining to those body systems.
9.00 and 9.09 Obesity
Comment: One comment we received
said that we should not move the obesity listing to the endocrine system
section, but that it should stay with the impairments in the multiple body
system section.
Response: We did not adopt the
comment. With the exception of obesity and Hansen's disease (which we have
deleted), we have moved all the impairments from the adult multiple body
systems section to the newly established "Immune System." Rather
than keep obesity as the sole impairment in a body system, we believe that
the most appropriate location for it would be the endocrine system, which
is now titled: "Endocrine System and Obesity."
Comment: A comment asked whether the
reference to the "spine" in proposed Listing 9.09A was meant to
include the cervical and thoracic regions of the spine. Another comment
said that the listing for obesity should state that the history of pain,
limitation of motion, and arthritis caused by obesity in any
weight-bearing joint or spine need only be minimal to satisfy the
listing's requirements.
Response: We agreed with the first
comment that the references to the "spine" in former Listing
10.10A and proposed Listing 9.09A could be made clearer. The listing has
always applied only to the weight-bearing parts of the spine (i.e., the
lumbosacral regions). Therefore we have clarified the language in final
Listing 9.09. This is not a substantive change from the prior rules or the
NPRM, but a clarification of our intent that the phrase
"weight-bearing" modify both "joint" and
"spine" in the listing.
We did not adopt the second comment because it is implicit in the language
of the rule. The fact that the degrees of pain,limitation of motion, and
arthritis in the weight-bearing structures are not quantified indicates
the intentional absence of threshold criteria.
Comment: A comment stated that the
adult obesity listing is inadequate for assessing obesity in children. The
comment also suggested that we consult with pediatricians to develop a
childhood obesity listing by which to assess whether a child is
functioning independently, appropriately, and effectively in an
age-appropriate manner.
Response: We did not adopt the
comment because the creation of a childhood obesity listing is beyond the
scope of these rules. When we consider revising the childhood endocrine
section, we will consider whether we need to add a listing for
obesity.
14.00 and 114.00
Immune System—Non-HIV Listings
Connective Tissue Disorders—General Comments
Comment: One comment stated that the
term "rheumatic diseases" better describes conditions such as
juvenile arthritis, systemic lupus erythematosus, dermatomyositis, and
scleroderma than does the term "connective tissue
disorders."
Response: We did not adopt the
comment. Inflammatory arthritides (which are types of connective tissue
disorders), including rheumatoid arthritis, psoriatic arthritis, Reiter's
syndrome, and ankylosing spondylitis, are included in the musculoskeletal
body system listings in 1.00 and 101.00. Therefore, we prefer the term
"connective tissue disorders" because it better describes the
disorders in 14.00 and 114.00.
Comment: Another comment said that
systemic lupus erythematosus, systemic sclerosis, and polymyositis are
rheumatic disorders that should be retained under the multiple body system
section, or grouped into a new section titled, "Rheumatic
Disorders." The comment added that any listing of the immune system
should include multiple sclerosis and myasthenia gravis.
Response: We did not adopt the
comment. We agree that all immune system disorders are not included in
this listing. There are many disorders of immune regulation that are
covered in other body systems, depending on the primary target organs. For
example, multiple sclerosis (Listing 11.09) and myasthenia gravis (Listing
11.12) are evaluated under the neurological body system because
neurological dysfunction is the primary outcome of these impairments.
However, in the immune system listings we have grouped a number of
connective tissue disorders that are characterized by autoimmune
abnormality.
Comment: A few commenters called for
rheumatoid arthritis to be grouped with systemic lupus erythematosus
(Listings 14.02 and 114.02), systemic vasculitis (Listings 14.03 and
114.03), systemic sclerosis (Listings 14.04 and 114.04), and polymyositis
(Listings 14.05 and 114.05). One of their comments said that the inclusion
of rheumatoid arthritis would be consistent with our emphasis on
functional aspects rather than labeling or diagnosis, inasmuch as the
effects of all of these disorders on joints and internal organs are very
similar.
Response: We did not adopt the
comment in these final rules. However, we will consider the comment when
we consider any revisions to the musculoskeletal body system
listings.
Comment: A few commenters called for
separate listing subsections for Sjögren's syndrome, sarcoidosis,
psoriatic arthritis, Ehlers-Danlos syndrome, Marfan's syndrome, and, in
the adult section, congenital immune deficiencies, such as genetic
dwarfism. They also stated that consideration of Raynaud's phenomena
should not be limited to systemic sclerosis and scleroderma. One of their
comments suggested the addition of listings subsections for
spondyloarthropathies, reactive arthritides, Bechet's syndrome, familial
Mediterranean fever, and inflammatory myopathies other than polymyositis,
such as body myositis. The comment also stated that the listings should
consider the effects of therapy, which can cause bone thinning, pathologic
fractures, and growth failure.
Response: We did not adopt the
comments, but we did add guidance to 114.00B of the childhood rules in
response to the last comment. The listings are only examples of
impairments, not an all-inclusive list, and serve as a screening device by
which we can quickly identify individuals who are disabled as a result of
commonly occurring impairments. Even though they include many impairments,
they have never been intended to include all impairments. It would not be
feasible to attempt to provide a listing for every known disease.
Generally, when a specific disease is not listed, we use the listing that
provides the findings most closely analogous to the findings associated
with the unlisted impairment.
Sjögren's syndrome is evaluated under the applicable body system depending
on the presenting manifestation (e.g., kerato-conjunctivitis under 2.00 or
102.00, xerostomia under 5.00 or 105.00, arthritis under 1.02 or 101.02,
and other connective tissue involvement under 14.00 or 114.00). The most
common rheumatic manifestation of sarcoidosis is acute arthritis, which
may be evaluated under the musculoskeletal system (Listings 1.02 and
101.02). When chronic arthritis occurs, the predominant impairment is due
to involvement of the lungs, spleen, bone marrow, and bone. Hence,
sarcoidosis, the cause of which is unknown, should also be evaluated under
the applicable body system, depending on the disease manifestations.
Psoriatic arthritis and spondylitis may be evaluated under 1.00, 101.00,
or 8.00. Raynaud's phenomena are seen in several connective tissue
disorders, but are particularly common in systemic sclerosis (Listings
14.04 and 114.04) and undifferentiated connective tissue disorders
(Listings 14.06 and 114.06). When they occur in these or other connective
tissue disorders and are characterized by digital ulceration, ischemia, or
gangrene, equivalence to Listing 14.04 or 114.04 could be found.
Although Ehlers-Danlos syndrome and Marfan's syndrome are connective
tissue disorders, they are not immune disorders, but genetic disorders,
and, therefore, should not be included in the immune system listings.
These syndromes are evaluated under the listings for the affected body
system, (e.g., cardiovascular, visual, musculoskeletal,
gastrointestinal).
Listings 14.07 and 114.07 provide criteria for immunoglobulin deficiency
states and non-HIV cell-mediated immune deficiency. Myositis and myopathy
may occur in a wide spectrum of diseases, and should be evaluated under
the body system applicable to the primary disorder associated with the
myopathy (e.g., 6.00 or 106.00 for hyperthyroidism, 11.00 or 111.00 for
myasthenia gravis, or 14.00 or 114.00 for connective tissue disorders).
Equivalence to 14.05 or 114.05, polymyositis, may be found when the
criteria are applicable but the cause of the myopathy is other than
polymyositis. Muscle weakness associated with myopathies may also manifest
equivalent severity under the neurological listings. Spondyloarthropathies
and "reactive" arthritides may be evaluated under 1.00 or
101.00. Bechet's syndrome is rare, its manifestations diverse, and
etiology unknown. The major findings are genital and oral ulcers, skin
lesions, and ocular lesions. Evaluation should be under the applicable
body system for the manifestation(s). Mediterranean fever is an inherited
disorder and not due to immune dysregulation. It is characterized by
acute, self-limited attacks of fever, abdominal pain, pleuritic pain and,
occasionally, arthritis. Evaluation for equivalence under rules applicable
to other episodic illnesses is appropriate.
We do consider the effects of treatment in all cases. The fifth paragraph
of 14.00B (both in the NPRM and the final rule) indicates that in addition
to the limitations caused by the connective tissue disorder itself, the
chronic adverse effects of treatment may result in functional loss.
However, even though this principle is fundamental to all disability
adjudications, the last comment made us realize that we had stated it
explicitly in the preface to the adult rules but not in the preface to the
childhood rules. Therefore, in response to the comment, we have added a
new fourth paragraph to final 114.00B which is identical to the
corresponding paragraph in the adult rules and underscores the need to
consider the adverse effects of treatment (such as corticosteroid therapy)
when evaluating connective tissue disorders in children.
Comment: We received a comment
stating that because of the vast number of rare "orphan
diseases," the primary factor that we should use to determine
disability should be functional limitations caused by symptoms of any
etiology.
Response: As noted previously, the
listings are only examples of commonly occurring impairments and are not
intended to include all impairments, especially rare ones. Many listings,
including final Listings 14.02-14.06 and 114.02-114.06 do include
functioning among their criteria; when we use these listings for
comparison to evaluate unlisted impairments, we also consider functioning
within the context of the listings. Moreover, for children who apply for
SSI benefits based on disability, we also provide a "functional
equivalence" determination.
Even if the individual's severe impairment(s) does not meet or equal in
severity any listing, we still always assess the functional limitations
caused by the impairment(s) and use that assessment to determine whether
the individual is disabled at the later steps of the sequential evaluation
processes for adults and children. As with all claims where the individual
has a severe impairment(s) that does not meet or equal the severity of a
listed impairment, the individual's claim is evaluated further and
residual functional capacity is assessed to determine if he or she has the
ability to do past relevant work. If the individual cannot perform his or
her past work, we will determine if there are other jobs the individual
can perform. In the case of a child under 18 who is applying for SSI, we
perform an individualized functional assessment to determine if he or she
is able to function independently, appropriately, and effectively in an
age-appropriate manner.
Comment: One comment said that,
beyond the information needed to make a medical diagnosis, there should be
more specific guidelines in the listings on assessing function because of
the imperfect relationship between a person's capacity and his or her
function.
Response: We did not adopt the
comment. We already have very detailed standards on assessing function for
all impairments. The instructions address the need to consider the
specific effects of each person's impairment(s) on his or her ability to
function and recognize that one individual's limitations may differ from
another's even though they may have the same impairment(s).
Comment: Another comment suggested
adding listing criteria for chronic fatigue syndrome which, the comment
said, is an immunological disorder that affects millions of
individuals.
Response: We did not adopt the
comment. Due to the divergence of medical opinion on chronic fatigue
syndrome, we do not believe that it is either possible or appropriate to
establish listing criteria. Further, such a listing would be beyond the
scope of these rules.
Comment: One comment questioned
whether adults who have impairments that would meet the childhood criteria
may be found disabled using the part B criteria. The comment also asked if
children who have impairments that meet the childhood criteria will remain
eligible upon attainment of age 18, or whether they will then have to
demonstrate that they have impairments that meet the part A
criteria.
Response: As set forth in
§§ 404.1525(b)(2) and 416.925(b)(2) of our regulations, the
criteria in part B apply only to the evaluation of impairments in persons
under age 18. Therefore, the listings in part B may not be used to find an
adult disabled.
We do not require children to reestablish disability based on adult
criteria when they attain age 18. However, we do periodically review the
claims of disabled people to determine whether they are still disabled.
When we determine whether disability continues, we apply a medical
improvement review standard required by the statute. Under this standard,
if a beneficiary who is now an adult was most recently found disabled (or
still disabled) because his or her impairment(s) met the childhood
criteria, we use those childhood criteria, even after the individual has
attained age 18, as a basis of comparison to determine whether there has
been any medical improvement in the individual's impairment(s) that is
related to the ability to work.
14.00A and B, and 114.00A and B
Preface
Comment: One comment said that the
discussion on polymyositis and dermatomyositis in 14.00B4 omitted any
other inflammatory myopathies and implies that if there is weakness, pain
or tenderness in any muscles other than the proximal limb-girdle,
cervical, cricopharyngeal, or intercostal muscles or the diaphragm, then
one does not meet this criterion.
Response: We accommodated the
comment by indicating in final 14.00B4 that the descriptions are only
meant to describe the criteria in Listing 14.05. The muscles described in
Listing 14.05 and in final 14.00B4 are the ones usually involved in
polymyositis or dermatomyositis. If other muscles are involved, the
underlying disorder—which may not be polymyositis—should be
identified if possible and considered under the appropriate body system
listings. If the impairment is found to be severe at the second step of
the sequential evaluation processes but does not meet or equal in severity
any listing at the third step of the processes, we will do an
individualized assessment of its impact on the person's functioning and
decide disability at the last steps of the sequential evaluation
processes.
Comment: Another comment stated that
weight loss as a constitutional symptom, which is recognized in 14.00B of
the adult listings, should also be recognized in the childhood
listings.
Response: We did not adopt the
comment because the proposed childhood listings already included weight
loss in the fourth paragraph of proposed 114.00B. That same language
appears in the last sentence of final 114.00B.
14.02-14.06 and 114.02-114.06
Connective Tissue Disorder Listings
Comment: One comment noted that the
phrase "with the expectation that the disease will remain active for
12 months" appeared repeatedly in the proposed connective tissue
disorder listings (in proposed Listings 14.02-14.06 and 114.02) and asked
how we make such a prediction. The comment said that unless we describe
how physicians are to make the prediction, claimants who have had active
disease for 10 or 11 months will be denied benefits.
Response: Even though we disagree
with the conclusion that we would deny claims filed by individuals who
have had active, listing-level disease for almost a year, we partially
adopted the aacomment. We frequently make findings of disability based on
an expectation that a disabling impairment(s) is expected to last for at
least 12 months. In most cases in which the evidence substantiates a
finding of disability, it is readily apparent from the same evidence
whether or not the impairment is expected to last 12 months from the onset
of disability. When the application is being adjudicated before the
impairment has lasted 12 months, the nature of the impairment, the
therapeutic history, and the prescribed treatment serve as the basis for
concluding whether the impairment is expected to continue to prevent the
individual from working for the required 12 months' duration.
However, we are not describing this in the listings because it is
longstanding practice that applies to all types of impairments, not just
connective tissue disorders.
This comment and others made us realize that the discussions on duration
in proposed Listings 14.02-14.06 and 114.02 made the proposed listings
unnecessarily complex. More importantly, they only repeated the general
listings requirements in §§ 404.1525(a) and 416.925(a). There
is, therefore, no reason to repeat the provision in each of these
listings. Therefore, in response to this and other comments, we removed
the repetitive language from each of the proposed listings and added a
single discussion on duration in 14.00B and 114.00B as a reminder of the
basic rules. For consistency, we also removed the statements in each of
the listings requiring a 3-month longitudinal clinical record, inasmuch as
we already make the statement in 14.00B and 114.00B. We also moved the
requirement that the disorder remain active, "despite prescribed
therapy" into the same sections of the preface. (We also changed the
word "therapy" to "treatment" for reasons explained
elsewhere in this preamble.) The result is that final Listings 14.02-14.06
and 114.02 are much simpler to read, even though there is no substantive
change in the rules as a result of these editorial changes.
Finally, we will not generally find an individual who has had active,
listing-level disease for 10 or 11 months to be not disabled. Unless the
impairment has significantly improved to the point at which it is no
longer disabling at the second, fourth, or fifth steps of the sequential
evaluation process for adults (or the second or fourth steps of the
sequential evaluation process for children claiming SSI benefits) before
the end of 12 months after onset, an allowance would be appropriate. We
are confident that our adjudicators understand this principle.
Comment: A comment suggested
editorial changes to the statements regarding duration in Listings 14.02
and 14.03, apparently to remove redundancies.
Response: We adopted the comment in
part by moving references pertaining to durational requirements from all
of the listings that used this language to one location in 14.00B and
114.00B.
Comment: One comment we received
said that there were problems with including in Listing 114.02A
cross-references to other listings criteria as a means of describing the
multiple organ dysfunction of systemic lupus erythematosus. The comment
said that the type and pattern of organ involvement in systemic lupus
erythematosus is not always the same as in other disorders and that muscle
involvement in scleroderma and systemic sclerosis is not necessarily
similar or identical to the muscle involvement of polymyositis or
dermatomyositis. The comment also questioned the propriety of referencing
some of the childhood connective tissue disorders to adult criteria
because the disorders are not always identical in children and
adults.
Response: We did not adopt the
comment. Connective tissue disorders may involve many different organs and
body systems. Establishing specific criteria for every organ in each body
system would make the listing unnecessarily complicated. Consequently, we
believe that cross-references to existing listings are the best solution.
We cross-referenced the childhood systemic lupus erythematosus listing
(final Listing 114.02) to other body systems, the scleroderma and systemic
sclerosis childhood listing (final Listing 114.04) and polymyositis and
dermatomyositis childhood listing (final Listing 114.05) to the
corresponding adult rules in final Listings 14.04 and 14.05, and the
childhood undifferentiated connective tissue disorders listing (final
Listing 114.06) to the childhood listings for systemic lupus erythematosus
and systemic sclerosis and scleroderma (final Listings 114.02 and 114.04),
because their manifestations can be identical, even though the causes of
the problems are not the same. Cross-referencing provides a means to find
the existence of a disabling impairment when a single manifestation of
disease is at the same level of severity described in the cross-referenced
listing.
Comment: A comment asked whether
severe fatigue, fever, malaise, and weight loss must all be present to
satisfy the criteria in Listings 14.02B, 14.03B, and 14.04B (and,
presumably, 114.02B).
Response: We adopted the comment.
The parenthetical "e.g." in the proposed rules was an error. We
have corrected final Listings 14.02B, 14.03B, 14.04B and 114.02B to show
that all four symptoms and signs must be present. However, instead of
replacing the proposed "e.g." with "i.e.," as we
originally intended, we have revised the sentence to make our intent
clearer. The final provisions state that the disorders must be "* * *
associated with significant constitutional symptoms and signs of severe
fatigue, fever, malaise, and weight loss." We chose the particular
symptoms and signs shown in the listings because they are the most common
and are most likely to be present.
Comment: Another comment asked that
we define the terms "severe" and "moderate" used
throughout the listings for connective tissue disorders.
Response: We did not adopt the
comment. Even though, as we explain later, we changed the term
"severe" in places where it could have been confused with other
terms ("incapacitating" and "major"), we retained the
terms "severe" and "moderate" where we believe they
are appropriate and unambiguous. The terms are widely used to describe
relative values on a rating scale, and their meanings are commonly
understood. But because their meanings are somewhat nonspecific, use of
these terms in Listings 14.02, 14.03, 14.04, and 114.02 unquestionably
requires a degree of judgment, as do many other aspects of our disability
evaluation process. Our adjudicators are accustomed to making these
judgments on a case-by-care bases, and we believe that attempting to
devise specific definitions for terms that are, by their nature,
non-specific, would only make the listings confusing. However, in response
to this comment, we have also provided clarification in 14.00B and 114.00B
that we use the word "severe" in these listings in its medical
sense, not in the functional sense associated with the second step of our
sequential evaluation processes. We explain this provision in a later
response, below.
14.02 and 114.02
Systemic Lupus Erythematosus
Comment: One comment noted our
statement in proposed 14.00B1 that, "[g]enerally" the medical
evidence will show that patients with systemic lupus erythematosus will
fulfill the 1982 "Revised Criteria for the Classification of Systemic
Lupus Erythematosus" of the American College of Rheumatology
(formerly, the American Rheumatism Association). The comment also noted
that this implies that an individual can have systemic lupus erythematosus
and not fulfill these criteria, and asked why similar latitude is not
provided for other conditions.
Response: We did not adopt the
comment. We used the word "generally" because the diagnosis is
not invariably made strictly according to the criteria. To meet the
American College of Rheumatology diagnostic criteria for systemic lupus
erythematosus an individual must have four manifestations out of a list of
11 criteria, and the vast majority of people with this disorder will meet
these criteria. However, a doctor will occasionally make a diagnosis of
systemic lupus erythematosus when an individual has only three out of 11
manifestations, or other findings, when it appears likely that the
diagnosis is appropriate.
Latitude is built into all the connective tissue disorder criteria. The
guidance in final 14.00B3 for evaluations under Listing 14.04, Systemic
sclerosis and scleroderma does not require that any specific pattern of
disease manifestations be present to establish the diagnosis. The criteria
in Listing 14.04 are similar to those for the other connective tissue
disorders, providing references to other listings. As in thoseother
listings, it also provides alternative criteria for multisystem
manifestations associated with constitutional symptoms and signs. This is
also true of polymyositis, 14.00B4 and final Listing 14.05, and
undifferentiated connective tissue disorder, 14.00B5 and final Listing
14.06.
Systemic vasculitis, 14.00B2 and final Listing 14.03, comprises several
diverse clinical syndromes and is characterized diagnostically by a tissue
biopsy showing necrotizing vascular inflammation. Hence, a tissue biopsy
or an angiogram showing the characteristic vascular abnormalities is
necessary to confirm the clinically suspected diagnosis. However, when the
findings of a referenced listing are present or multisystem involvement is
evident with constitutional symptoms and signs, listing-level severity may
be found even if there has not been a definitive diagnosis. Hence, this
listing also provides latitude.
Comment: A few commenters said that
they were not sure that the medical community at large is familiar with
the 1982 "Revised Criteria for the Classification of Systemic Lupus
Erythematosus" of the American College of Rheumatology. They
suggested that, instead of referencing it, the material should be included
in the listing itself or in a readily available supplement. One of their
comments asked why we proposed to use the American College of Rheumatology
criteria for systemic lupus erythematosus, but not for the other
connective tissue disorders. The comment also said that most of the
rheumatic diseases are syndromes and the diagnoses are made by meeting
specific criteria.
Response: We did not adopt the first
comment because we do not think that it is necessary to publish the
diagnostic criteria in the regulations. The American College of
Rheumatology diagnostic criteria are widely available and widely
known.
Systemic lupus erythematosus is a relatively common disease, the diagnosis
of which is based upon the presence of several non-specific clinical and
laboratory abnormalities. Because of the lack of a single set of
diagnostic findings, individuals may be erroneously diagnosed because of a
non-specific laboratory result. It is, therefore, appropriate to refer to
the published American College of Rheumatology diagnostic criteria. The
vasculitides, on the other hand, are rare and difficult to diagnose
clinically. The hallmark for and the diagnosis of vasculitis is almost
invariably based upon characteristic clinical findings and tissue biopsy
showing necrotizing vascular inflammation. Moreover, there are no
published specific diagnostic criteria based upon clinical observations
and laboratory tests. Therefore, referral to published diagnostic criteria
is not possible.
Comment: A few commenters said that,
because the type and pattern of joint involvement in rheumatoid arthritis
and juvenile rheumatoid arthritis differs from that seen in systemic lupus
erythematosus, the rheumatoid arthritis and juvenile rheumatoid arthritis
criteria in Listings 1.02 and 101.02 should not be applied as reference
listings to the evaluation of systemic lupus erythematosus under Listings
14.02A1 and 114.02A2. One of their comments noted further that, if there
is joint involvement consistent with rheumatoid arthritis or juvenile
rheumatoid arthritis in the presence of other findings consistent with
systemic lupus erythematosus, then, by our definition, this would be an
undifferentiated connective tissue disorder, which should be evaluated
under Listings 14.06 and 114.06.
Response: We did not adopt the
comment. In referencing proposed Listing 14.02A1 to Listing 1.02, and
proposed Listing 114.02A2 to Listing 101.02, we were providing a means to
determine the presence of a disabling impairment when a single
manifestation of disease is at the same level of severity as that
described in the reference listing. We did not mean to imply that systemic
lupus erythematosus and rheumatoid arthritis have identical
characteristics. To make this point even clearer, we have revised the
cross-references in the final rules to the generic body system headings,
1.00 and 101.00, in order to include any musculoskeletal effects of
systemic lupus erythematosus that are at the listing level of
severity.
A diagnosis of undifferentiated connective tissue disorder is appropriate
where the impairment has features suggestive of a connective tissue
disorder but not diagnostic of any one disorder. We did not intend to
suggest otherwise in Listings 14.02A1 and 114.02A2, which describe
properly diagnosed systemic lupus erythematosus.
Comment: One comment noted that the
adult listing for systemic lupus erythematosus included a criterion for
muscle involvement (Listing 14.02A2), but proposed childhood Listing
114.02 did not.
Response: In response to the
comment, we added muscle involvement to final Listing 114.02A3. Because of
this addition, we renumbered the subsequent criteria accordingly.
Comment: Another comment suggested
that Listing 114.02 include cross-references to criteria in the hemic
system and to the listings for depression and Raynaud's phenomena.
Response: We adopted the comment.
Although proposed childhood Listings 114.02A8 and 114.02A12 did include
cross-references to specific hemic listings (Listings 7.02 and 107.06) and
mental disorders listings (Listings 112.02, 112.03, and 112.04), we
revised final Listings 114.02A9 and 114.02A13 so that they refer to the
hemic and lymphatic and mental "body systems" in general (107.00
and 112.00), instead of to specific listings. In this way, no hemic or
mental manifestations will be overlooked and the listing will remain
up-to-date should we revise the hemic and mental listings in the future.
Even though Raynaud's phenomena are not a primary feature of childhood
systemic lupus erythematosus, we added a cross-reference to Listing 14.04D
in final Listing 114.02A6 for those situations in which children do have
such manifestations at the listing level. For consistency, we also added a
cross-reference to Listing 14.04D in the corresponding adult rule, final
Listing 14.02A5.
Comment: One comment suggested that
in proposed Listing 14.02B the requirement that the individual demonstrate
"severe" and "incapacitating" signs and symptoms was
extreme, especially when a full 12 months of this level of severity must
be anticipated.
Response: We adopted the comment in
part. We agree that "incapacitating" is a higher level of
severity than is needed to show listing-level severity. Furthermore, the
comment made us realize that we had proposed slightly different language
(using the terms "severe," "incapacitating," and
"major") for corresponding paragraphs in proposed Listings
14.02B, 14.03B, 14.04B, and 114.02B, when we intended to say the same
thing in each section. Furthermore, the word "major," which we
had proposed in Listing 14.04B, could have caused confusion because it has
a particular meaning in the medical community, referring to kinds of
infections. Therefore, we replaced all these terms with the word
"significant," which conveys the intended meaning consistently
throughout these final listings.
We also realized that referring to "severe" symptoms and signs
in these listings could have caused confusion because "severe"
has a specific meaning when we use the word in the phrase "severe
impairment" to describe the functional impact of an impairment(s)
(see §§ 404.1520, 404.1521, 416.920, 416.921, and 416.924). For
this reason, we have added a sentence at the end of the sixth paragraph of
final 14.00B and 114.00B to explain that we use the term
"severe" in these listings to describe medical severity and that
it does not have the same meaning as it does when we use it in connection
with a finding at the second step of the sequential evaluation processes
for adults and children.
14.03 and 114.03
Systemic Vasculitis
Comment: One comment said that
proposed Listing 14.03 on vasculitis was stricter and more detailed than
then-current Listing 10.03, which required only signs of generalized
arterial involvement.
Response: Listing 14.03 is more
detailed than prior Listing 10.03, but the criteria are not stricter.
Rather, they are more medically accurate and reflect state-of-the-art
practice. They also now include all forms of systemic vasculitis, and
ensure more consistent and valid determinations.
14.04 and 114.04
Systemic Sclerosis and Scleroderma
Comment: A comment suggested that we
delete the word "generalized" before "scleroderma" in
Listing 14.04C. Another comment questioned why we provided a listing for
linear scleroderma for children (Listing 114.04B) but no similar listing
for adults, and noted that 14.00B3 omits mention of the differences
between limited and diffuse scleroderma.
Response: We have retained the term
"generalized" in final Listing 14.04C because adults rarely
manifest localized scleroderma; if they do, equivalence to a listing in
1.00 or a residual functional capacity assessment may lead to a finding of
disability because of destructive or mutilating lesions of the extremities
or the head. We provided criteria for localized scleroderma for children
because destructive and mutilating lesions involving the extremities,
head, and scalp not only interfere with walking and using the upper
extremities, but also with growth and development; scalp and facial
lesions in children may also be accompanied by seizures.
"Limited" cutaneous scleroderma is not the same thing as
"localized" or "linear" scleroderma, but a systemic
form of the disorder. We did not mention the differences between limited
and diffuse cutaneous scleroderma in the preface because the differences
are not needed for application of the criteria in final Listings 14.04 and
114.04.
Comment: A comment said that,
although severe Raynaud's phenomena were included in the proposed Listing
14.04D criteria, they were not defined.
Response: We have clarified the
listing in response to the comment. In fact, proposed Listing 14.04D did
describe severe Raynaud's phenomena, which are characterized by digital
ulcerations, ischemia, or gangrene. However, we realized that the language
of the proposed rule, "Raynaud's phenomena with" these findings,
was not clear. We have, therefore, changed the word "with" to
"characterized by" in the final listing to make clear that the
findings of digital ulcerations, ischemia, or gangrene define severe
Raynaud's phenomena.
14.05 and 114.05
Polymyositis and Dermatomyositis
Comment: One comment stated that
proposed Listing 14.05, for polymyositis and dermatomyositis, was too
strict. The comment said that an individual who satisfied the criteria in
the opening paragraph of the listing (which required 3 months of active
disease, severe proximal muscle weakness despite prescribed treatment, and
an expected duration of 12 months) should be found to meet the listing
without also having to satisfy the criteria in proposed Listing 14.05A or
14.05B.
Response: We partially adopted the
comment. The commenters misunderstood our intent in proposed Listing
14.05. The criteria in proposed Listings 14.05A and 14.05B were not
additional criteria, but were meant to define the "severe proximal
muscle weakness" in the opening paragraph. However, the comment made
us realize that the listing could be made clearer. Therefore, we
have clarified the requirements in final Listing 14.05 by removing
the opening paragraph, which was redundant of the criteria for
documentation, duration, and severity, discussed in other parts of the
listings, and which is now in final 14.00B.
Comment: Another comment suggested
that we provide more detail about the required severity of proximal muscle
weakness. The comment said that proposed Listing 14.05 required shoulder
or pelvic muscle weakness as described in Listing 11.12, which pertains
only to muscle weakness of the extremities. The comment also questioned
how swallowing and impairment of respiration are to be evaluated under
Listings 14.05B1 and 14.05B2.
Response: In response to the
comment, we deleted the cross-reference to Listing 11.12B in final Listing
14.05A and instead provided a discussion of the intent of the provision in
final 14.00B4. We also provided a more detailed description of the
criteria in final Listing 14.05B1 for cricopharyngeal weakness. However,
we think that proposed Listing 14.05B2 was clear and have made no changes
in that final listing.
Comment: Another comment questioned
why there was no adult listing corresponding to Listing 114.05B for
polymyositis or dermatomyositis with severe multiple joint contracture or
diffuse cutaneous calcification, and why swallowing or respiratory
difficulties are limited to adult Listing 14.05B1.
Response: Both multiple joint
contractures and diffuse cutaneous calcification are extremely uncommon
findings in adults with these disorders; however, if an adult has these
findings their specific impact on the individual must be assessed.
Multiple joint contractures in an adult that are of listing-level severity
should be evaluated under the criteria in 1.00ff, the musculoskeletal body
system. Listing-level cutaneous calcification may be evaluated under
Listing 14.04, Systemic sclerosis and scleroderma.
Swallowing and respiratory difficulties are not limited to Listing 14.05B.
Childhood Listing 114.05A indicates that impairment should be evaluated
according to Listing 14.05. Therefore, all of the criteria in Listing
14.05 apply to children.
14.06 and 114.06
Undifferentiated Connective Tissue Disorder
Comment: One comment questioned
whether the term "undifferentiated connective tissue disorder"
used in Listings 14.06 and 114.06 is synonymous with "mixed
connective tissue disorder." The comment also questioned why chronic
undifferentiated tissue disorder is evaluated by reference to the criteria
in Listing 14.02, Systemic lupus erythematosus, and stated that the
disorder is either systemic lupus erythematosus or it is not.
Response: We partially adopted the
comment. We added a discussion of overlap syndromes to final 14.00B5
(which is also referred to in 114.00B) and noted that these syndromes
should be evaluated under Listings 14.06 and 114.06. Although most
individuals with undifferentiated connective tissue disorders have
features of systemic lupus erythematosus, we recognize that some may have
features of systemic sclerosis and scleroderma. Therefore, we added to
Listings 14.06 and 114.06 cross-references to Listings 14.04 and 114.04.
However, we prefer to confine Listings 14.06 and 114.06 to
undifferentiated connective tissue disorders to indicate the lack of a
specific diagnosis, with its attendant specific prognosis. We also have
retained the title.
Comment: Another comment stated that
there is a distinction between the undifferentiated connective tissue
disorders (i.e., where a connective tissue disorder is present but
unknown) and the overlap syndromes (i.e., where there are elements of more
than one connective tissue disorder present). This comment also said that
both types should be recognized under the listing and that, because some
of these disorders are not undifferentiated, Listings 14.06 and 114.06
should be titled: "Other Connective Tissue Disorders."
Response: We did not adopt the
comment, except to the extent that we added the aforementioned discussion
about overlap syndromes to final 14.00B5. "Undifferentiated
connective tissue disorder" is similar to, but not synonymous with,
"overlap syndrome" and "mixed connective tissue
disorder," but the latter two classifications depend upon
constellations of non-specific features. Undifferentiated connective
tissue disorders have the clinical and immunologic features of several
connective tissue disorders, none of which satisfies the criteria for any
of the disorders described. Overlap syndromes have clinical features of
more than one established connective tissue disorder, and mixed connective
tissue disorders usually have features of systemic lupus erythematosus,
systemic sclerosis, and myositis. Most individuals with mixed connective
tissue disorders eventually will be shown to have either systemic lupus
erythematosus, systemic sclerosis, or Sjögren's syndrome, but a few remain
undiagnosed and should be labeled "undifferentiated."
Comment: A comment stated that the
criteria for evaluation of childhood undifferentiated connective tissue
disorders in Listing 114.06 were a confusing series of cross-references,
noting that Listing 114.06 referred to evaluation under corresponding
adult Listing 14.06 which, in turn, referred to Listing 14.02.
Response: We adopted the comment.
Final Listing 114.06 now indicates that undifferentiated connective tissue
disorders should be evaluated by reference to Listings 114.02 or
114.04.
14.07 and 114.07
Immunoglobulin Deficiency Syndromes or Congenital Immune Deficiency Disease
Comment: One comment said that the
criteria for the evaluation of immune deficiency disease in Listings 14.07
and 114.07 are too restrictive because they consider only immunoglobulin
deficiency syndromes or deficiencies of cell-mediated immunity, and
exclude other immune deficiencies or immune dysregulatory states. The
comment also noted our statement in proposed 14.00A that the " * * *
disorders include impairments involving deficiency of one or more
components of the immune system * * *." The comment said that,
although a number of examples are listed in this section, many of the
potential immune system impairments are absent from Listings 14.07 and
114.07.
Response: We did not adopt the
comment. As we have stated, the listings are only examples of commonly
occurring impairments, and are not meant to be all-inclusive.
Immunoglobulin deficiency syndromes or deficiencies of cell-mediated
immunity are the most common immune deficiencies. Immune deficiency
disorders not specified in Listing 14.07 or 114.07, but that are of
listing-level severity, may be found equivalent in severity to the listed
14.00 and 114.00 Immune System: General Comments On The HIV Listings
Populations Covered By the Rules
Comment: Various commenters asserted
that the proposed rules did not include manifestations of HIV infection
that affect women, persons of color, gay and lesbian people, and the
poor.
Response: On the basis of
information we received from individual medical and other experts who
study, treat, and work with people who have HIV infection, as well as our
review of the medical literature, we do not agree that the proposed rules
excluded these groups of people. Based on our experience since December
17, 1991, using our revised operating procedures, we know that the
proposed listings would have included the vast majority of people who were
disabled by HIV infection. Nevertheless, as we have already explained
above in the summary of the final provisions, we have further revised the
final listings to make them even more inclusive. Among the new criteria
are several new criteria in both the adult and childhood listings that
include more of the manifestations of HIV infection unique to women and
girls. We are confident that these final rules provide criteria for
evaluating all of the manifestations of HIV infection suffered by various
populations.
Comment: One of the comments said
that the proposed listing did not recognize the medical conditions that
affect drug abusers, and that some chronic conditions were not
listed.
Response: This comment did not
identify any additional conditions that were not listed. The
manifestations in proposed Listing 14.08M2 (with the exception of Kaposi's
sarcoma), as well as many others throughout the proposed listing, are
conditions that affect drug abusers. The conditions in proposed Listing
14.08M2 are now in the final rules as stand-alone medical listings,
without functional requirements.
Comment: Many commenters thought
that, despite our assertion to the contrary in the NPRM (56 FR at 65703),
the proposed rules had not broken the link to the CDC surveillance
definition of AIDS. They said the listings were unfair and discriminatory
to women, poor people, those who do not have CDC-defined AIDS, and those
with no continuity of health care. They indicated that, although we had
proposed to include manifestations that the CDC uses to define AIDS
without functional criteria, other illnesses (the kind not associated with
CDC-defined AIDS, but frequently found in women, intravenous drug users
and others who tend to be poor and have limited access to health care)
required that functional criteria be met.
Response: We disagree with the
comments, but we have revised the rules in response to these and other
comments to explicitly include even more manifestations without a
functional requirement. Therefore, even though we have included many of
the criteria of the CDC's surveillance definition of AIDS, we have also
provided many other criteria for people who have symptomatic HIV infection
but who do not meet the CDC surveillance definition.
For example, we added as stand-alone conditions as many HIV-related
conditions from proposed Listings 14.08M and 114.08L and 114.08M as
possible, including endocarditis, syphilis and neurosyphilis, meningitis,
pulmonary tuberculosis, and pneumonia. These manifestations are not
stand-alone criteria in the CDC surveillance definition of AIDS but, we
believe, can be sufficiently severe to be disabling in an individual with
HIV infection. In addition, we created a stand-alone listing that includes
pelvic inflammatory disease (final Listings 14.08A5 and 114.08A6) and
another that includes vulvovaginal candidiasis (final Listings 14.08F and
114.08F).
Standard of Disability
Comment: Many commenters believed
the proposed listings did not take into account the progressive nature of
HIV infection in adults or children. They suggested that claimants with
HIV infection should be found disabled at commensurately lower levels of
severity than claimants with other diseases. A few commenters suggested
that we adopt the broadest permissible definition of disability so as to
get medical care to as many HIV-infected individuals as early as possible.
They said this was important because the degenerative nature of
HIV-related conditions guarantees that if someone is nearly disabled
today, he or she will become disabled in the near future. One of their
comments said that, although our stringent disability standards make sense
with impairments that are relatively stable and capable of improvement,
such eligibility requirements are less necessary when dealing with rapidly
degenerative illnesses such as those associated with HIV. This is because
there is little need to consider whether applicants will remain ill long
enough to be classified as disabled—those impaired by such illnesses
simply do not get better. Another comment noted that, only through a
combination of Federal, State and local funding could early treatment and
care, including drug trials, be provided, and that tightening the listing
criteria would result in the City and State governments bearing the entire
responsibility for this continuum of care.
Some commenters cited the rapid deterioration experienced by children with
HIV infection, and the fact that few of these children live to adulthood,
especially those who acquire the virus from their mothers. The commenters
said that our childhood neoplastic listings (i.e., the listings in 113.00)
permit a finding of disability before marked functional loss has occurred
and thus set a precedent for doing something similar in the case of
children with HIV infection.
Response: We believe that these
rules provide the broadest permissible definition of listing-level
severity, consistent with the definition of disability contained in the
Act. Moreover, we do not have the authority to apply a different
definition of disability for some people than the standard of disability
in the Act. The Act requires that an individual be currently disabled, and
does not permit us to find an individual disabled based on a prediction of
future disability.
However, these rules are not stricter than our previous criteria. To the
contrary, both the proposed rules and these final rules provide more ways
in which people with HIV infection may establish that they have
listing-level impairments.
Our criteria take into account the unique course and history of HIV
disease in both adults and children, including its progressive nature. In
cases in which a claimant is experiencing a manifestation(s) of HIV
disease that is indicative of a rapid decline in an adult's ability to
engage in any gainful activity, or an SSI child claimant's ability to
function independently, appropriately, and effectively in an
age-appropriate manner, we have defined criteria that do not necessarily
require continuous HIV are rapidly degenerative, or that individuals with
HIV functional loss following the onset of the initial manifestation.
Rather, the manifestation of HIV infection can be found disabling even
though it includes periods of improvement. However, even though HIV
infection is progressive and ultimately fatal, it is not true that all
illnesses or other manifestations associated with infection cannot recover
from HIV-related manifestations. Many manifestations are treatable, and
many individuals can return to a good level of functioning following a
period of severe illness. The impact of HIV and its manifestations is
highly individual, and our disability adjudication system, which affords
an individualized determination to every claimant, recognizes this.
We believe that this approach is consistent with the approach we take in
the neoplastic listings. Neither the HIV listings nor the neoplastic
listings describe impairments of lower severity than other listings.
Rather, they recognize the medical realities of the conditions in terms of
prognosis, overall functioning on a longitudinal basis, and the impact of
treatment on functioning.
It is also very important to remember that no individual will be denied
benefits simply because his or her impairment(s) does not meet or equal
the severity of a listing. If an individual's impairment(s) does not meet
or equal the severity of a listing, he or she can be found disabled at
later steps of the sequential evaluation processes for adults and
children.
Finally, we want to assure the commenters that we share their concerns,
and are aware of the poor prognosis for individuals with HIV infection. We
believe the promulgation of these listings addresses those concerns.
Comment: Some commenters thought
that we should find any individual with symptomatic HIV infection to be
disabled.
Response: We do not agree that any
individual with symptomatic HIV infection of any type should be found
disabled. There are, in fact, many such conditions that are amenable to
treatment without significant after-effects, and others that are simply
not so severe as to render an individual unable to work or unable to
engage in age-appropriate activities. In both instances individuals may
continue to function well for long periods, and we believe that it is
reasonable to provide regulatory criteria that allow for the
individualized assessment of the effects of a person's impairment(s) on
him or her, as we have done in final Listings 14.08N and 114.08O.
Comment: A few commenters said that
the criteria for HIV infection should recognize that persons who have
asymptomatic HIV infection should have the right to treat their condition
and prolong their lives through rest and stress reduction, and not be
exposed to further compromise of their medical condition in a
workplace.
Response: We did not adopt the
comment. The standard of disability for adults under the statute is the
inability to engage in substantial gainful activity by reason of a
medically determinable physical or mental impairment(s), or for children
under age 18 who apply for SSI based on disability an impairment(s) of
comparable severity to one that would disable an adult. Even though we
agree that people who have asymptomatic HIV infection will ultimately
become ill, they are not functionally limited until the infection begins
to become symptomatic; i.e., until they begin to experience manifestations
of the HIV infection. Once individuals do become symptomatic, however,
these rules do not require that they be continuously symptomatic. The
rules require that their impairments be evaluated on a longitudinal basis
in order to form a picture of how the individual is able to function over
time. Indeed, we have provided a separate listing, final Listing 14.08N,
that includes individuals who suffer periodic manifestations of HIV
infection but who may not be continuously limited between the
episodes.
We would also like to clarify that we do not require people to work. The
Act uses the ability to work as a way of describing the level of severity
of impairment that constitutes a "disability." The Act does not
say that a person who does not meet the definition of disability must
work; it simply says that such a person is not disabled within the meaning
of the Act. Indeed, to underscore this point, the statute explicitly
excludes from consideration the factors of whether a job exists in the
area in which the person lives, whether there are job openings, or whether
the person would be hired to do a job. Thus, the listings are not intended
for use in determining whether or not an individual should work, but to
provide examples of impairments that satisfy the definition of disability
in the Act because they are considered severe enough to prevent an adult
from engaging in any gainful activity, or an SSI claimant under the age of
18 from functioning independently, appropriately, and effectively in an
age-appropriate manner.
Comment: One comment said that any
claimant whose physician reports positive HIV infection and a resulting
inability to work should be considered disabled, regardless of whether or
not the individual presents opportunistic infections.
Response: We did not adopt the
comment. As we have said, an individual with asymptomatic HIV infection
will not be functionally limited by the impairment. Under our rules for
evaluating medical opinion evidence in §§ 404.1527(e) and
416.927(e), the Secretary is responsible for determining whether an
individual is "disabled" under the Act; a statement by a medical
source that the individual is "unable to work" is not sufficient
in itself to establish that an individual is disabled within the meaning
of the Act. However, in making our determination, we review all of the
medical findings and other evidence in the individual's case record that
support a medical source's statement that the individual is disabled and
will recontact the source, if necessary, to obtain additional information
in support of the opinion.
Comment: A number of commenters
suggested that we give special consideration to the
"socioeconomic" factors that can affect HIV-infected claimants,
such as poor nutrition, limited or no access to ongoing health care,
inadequate housing, and adverse family factors.
Response: We did not adopt the
comments, but we have revised several provisions in response to these and
other comments to make clear that we do consider some of the factors the
commenters suggested, though not as "socioeconomic"
factors.
The Act requires that disability must be established on the basis of a
medically determinable physical or mental impairment(s) that results from
anatomical, physiological, or psychological abnormalities which are
demonstrable by medically acceptable clinical and laboratory diagnostic
techniques. It does not permit direct consideration of
"socioeconomic" factors as determinants of disability. For
example, under the Act we cannot consider whether a claimant lives in
inadequate housing or receives substandard medical care in making a
disability determination.
However, we do consider some of the factors the commenters believed to be
"socioeconomic" factors because they are medical factors under
our program. For example, under our program poor nutrition (i.e.,
malnutrition) is a medical condition and can be a disabling impairment in
and of itself if it is of sufficient severity and duration. Even if it is
not of listing-level severity, it can limit an individual's ability to
function and cause disability, or combine with other impairments to cause
disability. Individuals who receive substandard medical
care—especially individuals who have HIV infection—will often
be more severely impaired than other individuals because of more frequent
illness or failure to adequately recover from infections and other
manifestations that might be treatable with proper care, resulting in a
generally more severe medical and functional picture.
Thus, it is not necessary for us to consider "socioeconomic"
factors, which are ancillary to the determination of how the person is
actually affected by his or her impairment(s). For the purpose of deciding
disability, we need only know the nature and severity of the individual's
impairment(s) and its effects on his or her functioning. We do not use
factors like the quality of medical care or housing to determine whether a
person is medically disabled, just as we would not use such factors to
find a claimant not disabled.
However, in part because we agree with the commenters that many claimants
have limited access to ongoing health care, we have clarified the
documentation requirements in final 14.00D3 and 14.00D4, and 114.00D3 and
114.00D4 to make it clear that HIV infection or its manifestations may be
documented without definitive laboratory evidence if the documentation is
consistent with the prevailing state of medical knowledge and current
medical practice and is consistent with the other evidence. We do not
require specific diagnostic tests in all cases.
Comment: A few commenters proposed
that we should also assess the effect of an HIV-infected individual's home
situation on the ability to work when the individual is a parent caring
for a child or children who also show symptoms of HIV and are, therefore,
in need of more intensive care. These commenters observed that, because
such children require frequent administration of medication and regular
clinic visits and are not allowed to receive day care, they would be a
burden on a healthy parent; parents with HIV infection are already
required to miss work frequently because of their own conditions, and the
situation is exacerbated when the parent must also take time off from work
to care for sick children.
Response: We did not adopt the
comment. Under the Act, disability must result from the individual's
medically determinable impairment(s). We are, therefore, unable to provide
for a finding of disability when an adult is unable to attend work because
of the need to care for an ailing child and not because of a medically
determinable impairment(s). However, when we consider the extent to which
an individual's HIV-related manifestations affect his or her ability to
function, we consider the individual's ability to care for her or his
children.
Organization of the Listings
Comment: Many commenters requested
that we simplify the HIV listings. Some commenters thought that it was
unnecessary to publish all of the CDC's criteria for diagnosing AIDS in
our listings because some of the CDC criteria are redundant. They pointed
out, for example, that every manifestation in proposed Listings 14.08A and
114.08A was repeated somewhere in proposed Listings 14.08B-I and
114.08B-H; the only difference was that a person's manifestations would
meet Listings 14.08A or 114.08A if the person did not have laboratory
evidence confirming the presence of HIV infection, but would meet one of
the other listings if he or she did have such evidence. The commenters
noted that, whereas the CDC might have good reasons for distinguishing
between the two situations, the fact was that we would find an individual
who had one of these manifestations to be disabled under the listings
whether or not there was laboratory evidence of HIV infection. Therefore,
there was no reason for us to list the same manifestation more than
once.
Some commenters said that this complexity had led to inconsistencies in
the proposed rules. They pointed to various sections of the proposed
listings where the same conditions and the same evidence needed to
document those conditions were described in slightly different terms,
suggesting that the criteria were different even though they clearly were
not meant to be. They stated that these discrepancies and other
inconsistencies in the language would be confusing to both adjudicators
and the general public.
Some commenters pointed out repetitious language that we could delete (for
instance, the statement "Documentation of HIV infection as described
in 14.00D" at the beginning of every listing under proposed 14.08 and
114.08); others suggested ways to reorganize the listings. One of their
comments said that dividing the proposed listing by pathogenic process did
not increase the ease of reference and thought the repetition of section
headings added clutter. The comment recommended that we combine the
proposed listings into a single listing with all of the manifestations
arranged alphabetically.
Many commenters objected to the many different proposed criteria for
documenting the existence of the various manifestations in the listings.
We address the substantive comments in a separate section below, but as
pertinent here, the commenters pointed out that the numerous specific
criteria for documenting each of the different manifestations made the
listings very complex and difficult to use.
Response: We adopted the comments.
As we have already explained in the summary of the final provisions, we
have simplified the language and organization of the final rules and have
eliminated the redundancies of the proposed listings. In response to
comments we describe later in this section, we removed all of the various
specific requirements for documenting the presence of the manifestations
in lieu of the guidance we now provide in final 14.00D4 and 114.00D4. We
also revised the language throughout part A and part B to make them both
internally consistent and consistent with each other where
appropriate.
We chose to retain an organization that lists some of the manifestations
under general headings for the type of organism, and others according to
the affected body system or type of manifestation. We did not adopt the
suggestion that we list all the manifestations alphabetically, although we
did try it to see if it would work. We found that an alphabetical list was
more cumbersome than the system in these final rules. To begin with, the
list was very long; there are over 50 separate named manifestations in
final Listing 14.08. In addition, it was sometimes difficult to decide how
a given impairment should be of alphabetized (i.e., by specific organism,
affected organ, or kind of manifestation), and in some cases, impairments
that naturally seemed to group together (for example, cryptosporidiosis,
isosporiasis, and microsporidiosis, which are all protozoans that cause
diarrhea) were widely separated only because of the alphabetical artifice.
Moreover, we believe that the system we decided to use in the final rules
carries an advantage that simple alphabetization would not. By grouping
impairments according to etiology where possible and, elsewhere, into
other logical categories (such as body system or organ affected) we have
provided implicit guidance that will be more useful for finding medical
equivalence for unlisted manifestations than an alphabetized system
would.
Comment: One comment suggested
editorial revisions in 14.00D. The comment suggested that we consolidate
the definition and description of HIV infection into one location, giving
more emphasis to the progressive nature of the disease, that we
consolidate all information about evaluation of HIV infection cases under
the sequential evaluation process into one location, and that we eliminate
superfluous language. The commenter provided alternative language for
parts of proposed 14.00D.
Response: Although we have not
adopted the specific language suggested in the comment, we have rewritten
and reorganized all of the paragraphs in 14.00D of the final rule, and
removed repetitious language. In the final rule, we have revised the
definition of HIV infection in 14.00D1, consolidated the explanation of
how to evaluate individuals with HIV infection under the sequential
evaluation process in 14.00D6, and made other changes throughout 14.00D.
We discuss these changes in greater detail in the explanation of the final
rules and in response to public comments about specific issues addressed
in final 14.00D.
Comment: One comment suggested that
it was not necessary to list Hodgkin's and non-Hodgkin's lymphomas
separately, as we had proposed in Listings 14.08I and 14.08J. The comment
noted that, under the proposed rules, any individual with any type of
lymphoma would be found to have an impairment that met a listing;
therefore, it would be simpler to have one listing that included all
lymphomas. Another comment said that we should provide separate criteria
for immunoblastic sarcoma, which we had included with the lymphomas in
proposed Listing 14.08I2, because there is a controversy over whether it
is a true lymphoma.
Response: We adopted the first
comment. Final Listing 14.08E3 now includes all lymphomas. In a
parenthetical statement, the final listing names some of the various
lymphomas we had proposed in the NPRM, but characterizes them as examples
to emphasize that all lymphomas are included. This is because all
lymphomas in HIV-infected individuals carry a poor prognosis. We made the
same revisions in the childhood rules, at final Listing 114.08E3.
Even though we acknowledge that there is a dispute about whether
immunoblastic sarcoma is a lymphoma, we did not adopt the second comment.
Inasmuch as the prognosis is poor in all such cases with HIV infection and
the mere existence of the manifestation establishes listing-level
severity, there is no practical reason for establishing a separate listing
under our rules.
Documentation
Comment: A number of commenters said
that the proposed requirements for documentation of HIV infection were too
difficult and burdensome to meet, especially for indigent persons who do
not have a primary care physician and have inadequate access to health
care. The commenters also said that the tests we required in the proposed
rules to document a diagnosis of HIV infection are too expensive for
indigent persons to afford, and that proposed 14.00D required individuals
to undergo specific laboratory tests or invasive medical procedures to
establish a diagnosis or meet the listing. Several commenters also
expressed concern that requiring specific laboratory tests, such as an HIV
antibody test or a CD4 count, might inappropriately cause denials or the
early obsolescence of the criteria for establishing disability related to
HIV infection. Several commenters suggested that we consider clinical
judgment or generally acceptable means of diagnosis consistent with the
current state of medical knowledge. One commenter suggested specific
language about the standards for documenting HIV infection without
laboratory evidence, and included suggested language for the fourth
paragraph of proposed 14.00D to explain why a positive screening test for
HIV infection, such as ELISA, needs confirmation by a more definitive
test.
Response: We adopted the comments,
even though we did not require as much testing as the commenters believed.
For instance, in the fifth and sixth paragraphs of proposed 14.00D we
explained that a diagnosis of HIV infection could be accepted without
laboratory documentation based on the existence of a disease predictive of
a defect in cell-mediated immunity with no known cause of diminished
resistance to that disease. We also said that, in such cases, the
documentation of HIV infection will rely on the clinical history, physical
examination, exclusion of other causes for clinical abnormalities, and
treating source opinion. We also added language to final 14.00D3a and
114.00D3a to explain why a positive ELISA test must be confirmed by a more
definitive test.
However, recognizing the reality of limited access to health care for many
individuals, we have revised and expanded the language in final 14.00D3b
and 114.00D3b, Other acceptable documentation of HIV infection, to provide
that the existence of HIV infection may be documented without definitive
laboratory evidence when definitive laboratory evidence is not available.
We did not adopt the specific language suggested by one commenter. If no
definitive laboratory evidence is available, documentation may be by
medical history, clinical and laboratory findings, and diagnoses indicated
in the medical evidence, provided that it is consistent with the
prevailing state of medical knowledge and clinical practice and is
consistent with the other evidence. This would be true, for example, when
an individual has an opportunistic disease predictive of a defect in
cell-mediated immunity, and there is no other known cause of diminished
resistance to the disease (as we provided in the NPRM). We use the clause,
"If no definitive laboratory evidence is available," in the
final rules to make clear that we include individuals who may have
undergone HIV testing anonymously or when there are privacy
considerations. Of course, if laboratory tests have been performed and the
results are available, we will make every reasonable effort to obtain
them.
We have also made other changes in the rules. We made similar revisions to
our rules regarding the documentation of manifestations of HIV disease in
final 14.00D4b and 114.00D4b. We also no longer include separate listings
in final Listings 14.08 and 114.08 for manifestations of HIV with and
without documentation.
Comment: Some commenters believed
that diagnosis without definitive laboratory evidence should be accepted
for every manifestation in the proposed listings. Other commenters
requested clarification of which manifestations of HIV infection could be
diagnosed without definitive laboratory evidence and which required
definitive documentation.
Response: We did not adopt the
comments. We cannot make a blanket rule that permits diagnosis of every
listed manifestation in Listings 14.08 and 114.08 without definitive
laboratory evidence because some of the manifestations, such as Salmonella
bacteremia (Listing 14.08A3), lymphoma (Listing 14.08E3), nephropathy
(Listing 14.08L), and radiographically documented sinusitis (Listing
14.08M6), will by their very nature require laboratory testing. However,
we also do not want to specify exactly which of the manifestations may be
diagnosed without definitive laboratory evidence because we want to leave
the listings flexible to accommodate future medical practices. For this
reason, we provide in final 14.00D3b and 14.00D4b (as well as the
corresponding childhood sections) that the diagnosis of HIV and its
manifestations may be established by methods of documentation that are
"consistent with the prevailing state of medical knowledge and
clinical practice and consistent with the other evidence."
Comment: Another comment said that
the proposed rule's heavy reliance on documented HIV test results
disadvantaged persons who test positive for HIV infection at an anonymous
test site before developing HIV-related symptoms. Giving the example of an
individual applying for disability benefits under title II after she
tested positive for HIV infection at an anonymous test site and
subsequently developed an HIV-related condition, the comment recommended
that we apply later evidence of HIV infection retroactively to the date
when HIV-related symptoms first developed.
Response: We partially adopted the
comment. As we explained above, we introduced the clause, "If no
definitive laboratory evidence is available," in final 14.00D3 and
14.00D4, and 114.00D3 and 114.00D4, to underscore the fact that we include
the situation in which an individual may have undergone HIV testing
anonymously.
We did not add explicit rules on determining retroactivity. Our general
disability rules already permit us to establish an onset date in the past
based on an inference drawn from the medical and other evidence in the
case record. This does not mean, however, that we will find all
individuals with HIV infection to be disabled from the moment that they
tested positive for the HIV. As we have said, individuals with HIV
infection who are otherwise asymptomatic and do not yet have any
limitations are not disabled under the definition of disability in the
Act. On the other hand, it is possible for us to find disabled as of the
date the manifestation(s) first occurred, an individual who began
experiencing manifestations of HIV infection before she knew that she had
HIV infection. As we always do, we will determine an individual's onset
date based on the facts of the specific case.
Treatment
Comment: A few commenters said that
we did not address the adverse side effects caused by treatment or explain
how to evaluate improvement caused by AZT therapy.
Response: Although we did include a
general discussion of the need to consider the effects of treatment in the
fourteenth paragraph of proposed 14.00D, we have expanded the discussion
in antiretroviral agents as an example of a type of treatment that may
ameliorate the condition or cause side effects. AZT is a kind of
antiretroviral agent; we did not mention it specifically because final
14.00D7, Effect of treatment, in response to the comments. The final
section contains three paragraphs. The first paragraph stresses the
importance of considering both the positive and negative effects of
treatment. In the paragraph, we mention we would like the rules to remain
current if new treatments are devised in the future that supplant the use
of AZT.
In the second and third paragraphs of the final rule, we provide guidance
about how to evaluate the effects of treatment. We stress the need to take
into consideration on a case-by-case basis both the positive and negative
effects of treatment on the individual's ability to function. In these
same paragraphs, we also point out that some individuals may respond to
treatment more successfully than others and that the effects of treatment
may be temporary or long-term. As in the NPRM, the final section provides
that it is essential to obtain a specific description of the drugs or
treatment given, and a description of the complications or any other
response to treatment.
Equivalence
Comment: A few commenters suggested
that we include in the listing preface more instructions to be used in
determining when unlisted conditions equal the severity of listed
conditions. They said that an applicant would have no way of knowing what
he or she would have to prove, because program physicians determine
whether an unlisted illness has a level of severity equivalent to a listed
impairment. One of their comments suggested that, even though such things
are not amenable to exact quantitative measurement, the approximate levels
of pain, fatigue, and physical impairment associated with each listed
illness, along with any other relevant factors, such as frequency and
duration of episodes, could be specified, so any illness that meets the
least restrictive of these descriptions could qualify as a
disability.
Response: We did not add guidance to
the listings about how to determine equivalence, but we have provided more
of the kind of detail the commenters requested in the final rules. We do
not provide substantive instructions for determining equivalence in any of
the listings sections in part A or part B. We have separate rules in
§§ 404.1526, 416.926, and 416.926a of our regulations which set
forth criteria for determining equivalence. The rules on equivalence
include rules in § 416.926a for assessing a child's functional
limitations to determine whether they are the same as the disabling
functional consequences of any impairment in the listings.
The majority of our listings describe conditions for which medical
criteria can be specified that are of such severity that it is unnecessary
to consider the kinds of factors mentioned by the commenters. Final
Listings 14.08 and 114.08 are no exception; the criteria for all of the
manifestations in Listings 14.08A-M and 114.08A-N are met without the need
to consider or specify whether there are symptoms or limitations; the
levels of fatigue, pain, or "physical impairment" these
impairments may cause are implicit in the listings. Only final Listings
14.08N and 114.08O, which employ functional criteria as a measure of
severity, require such considerations. As we have already explained, we
have extensively revised the functional rules in response to these and
other comments, and we believe that we have provided more detail about the
kinds of symptoms and the extent of limitations necessary to meet these
listings within the listings themselves and in 14.00D and 114.00D.
In addition to symptoms (such as fatigue and pain) and limitations, the
commenters also suggested that we better define other factors, such as the
frequency and duration of episodes mentioned in various listings. We
believe we have responded to this comment as well in the extensive
revisions in final 14.00D and 114.00D. In these sections, we have, among
other changes, provided definitions of the terms "resistant to
treatment" and "recurrent," included language about the
need to consider an individual's medical and functional status on a
longitudinal basis, and provided explicit guidance (in final 14.00D8)
about the meaning of the term "repeated" in final Listing
14.08N. In the listings themselves, we added specific criteria for the
frequency, duration, and severity of episodes of manifestations wherever
it was relevant. For example, final Listings 14.08A5 and 114.08A6 specify
that the multiple or recurrent bacterial infections must require
hospitalization or intravenous antibiotic treatment at least 3 times in 1
year.
Finally, an individual does not have to know what he or she has to prove
to us in order for us to make a finding of equivalence or any other
finding regarding disability. We assist the individual by requesting the
evidence we need for our determination. Moreover, an individual does not
have to "prove" equivalence to us to be found disabled. If we
determine that the individual's impairment(s) is equivalent in severity to
a listed impairment, we will find that the individual is disabled.
However, if we determine that an individual's impairment or impairments
are "severe," but that they are not listed and are not
equivalent in severity to a listed impairment, our evaluation will proceed
through the final steps of the sequential evaluation process before we
make any determination about whether the individual is disabled.
Proposed 14.08M, 114.08L, and 114.08M:
The Functional Listings
Proposed 14.08M1-M3, 114.08L1-L2, and 114.08M1-M3:
The Medical Criteria
Comment: A number of commenters said
that the manifestations of HIV infection in proposed Listings 14.08M2 and
14.08M3, 114.08L1 and 114.08L2, and 114.08M2 and 114.08M3 were severe
enough to be disabling without meeting a functional test, or had their own
functional ramifications. Some commenters indicated that the manner in
which the diseases were ranked did not accurately reflect the true
disabling effects of some of the conditions. A number of commenters
specifically questioned the need for functional requirements for people
with Kaposi's sarcoma in proposed Listing 14.08M2h. Some commenters noted
that there was a range of severity for Kaposi's sarcoma. (CD4 lymphocyte
count, the other criterion associated with the functional criteria in
proposed Listings 14.08M1 and 114.08M1, is addressed in a separate comment
and response, below.)
Some commenters thought that our use of the terms "persistent"
and "resistant" to describe the severity of the manifestations
was confusing. They said we should define the terms.
Response: We adopted many of the
comments. As we have already explained in the summary of the final
provisions above, we devised stand-alone medical listings for most of the
manifestations we had proposed in the functional listings. We also removed
all of the specific manifestations we had proposed to list in lieu of more
general descriptive rules that include any kind of manifestation of HIV
infection, not only those that were in the proposed functional listings.
Our changes were based on the public comments, additional medical
information received from doctors—including pediatricians and
physicians specializing in the treatment of HIV infection in
women—and from other professionals with expertise in treating and
studying individuals with HIV infection.
We converted all eight HIV manifestations included in proposed Listings
14.08M2, 114.08L1, and 114.08M2 into stand-alone listing criteria. We
agreed for the most part with commenters who stated that the first six of
the eight listed manifestations would be listing-level impairments if they
were "persistent and/or resistant to therapy," as described in
the proposed rules, without the need to consider functional deficits. In
the final listings, pulmonary tuberculosis is in Listings 14.08A1 and
114.08A1; pneumonia, sepsis, meningitis, septic arthritis, and
endocarditis are in final Listings 14.08M and 114.08N.
The final rules require that these conditions be "resistant to
treatment" instead of "persistent and/or resistant to
therapy." We made this change for a number of reasons. We used the
word "treatment" instead of "therapy" only to make the
language of the final rules consistent with other sections in the
listings; this is merely an editorial change. The phrase "persistent
and/or resistant to therapy," however, was redundant and could have
been confusing. The phrase "and/or" was unnecessary in that,
because of the disjunctive, "or," a person would have had an
impairment that met the listings with either persistence or resistance to
treatment; therefore, the conjunctive, "and," was superfluous.
Also, in most situations, "persistent" would have been redundant
of "resistant to therapy" because, if a person was receiving
treatment and the manifestation persisted, the manifestation was
implicitly resistant to treatment.
Moreover, the word "persistent" was also ambiguous and difficult
to define. Some manifestations can respond to treatment without being
cured. They can technically "persist" because the organisms that
cause them are still present, but not necessarily be disabling. If we said
the manifestations had to persist at a disabling level, the individual
would have to be in treatment and the manifestation resistant to
treatment: Individuals with persistent disabling pneumonia, pulmonary
tuberculosis, sepsis, and meningitis require treatment or they will die;
septic arthritis is usually a sign of a more pervasive infection and is so
debilitating that the individual would also require treatment.
Therefore, we deleted the word, "persistent," from the final
rules. However, we also provided alternative criteria for the
manifestations in final Listings 14.08M and 114.08N by which individuals
whose manifestations respond to treatment only to recur may establish
listing-level severity.
We did not agree with the commenters who thought that we could list the
remaining two manifestations proposed in Listings 14.08M2, 114.08L1 and
114.08M2, peripheral neuropathy and Kaposi's sarcoma, without some other
indication of medical severity. Both Kaposi's sarcoma and peripheral
neuropathy vary widely in severity. These disorders, even when not
amenable to treatment, may not seriously impair functioning, even in
individuals with HIV infection. Therefore, the medical criteria we
developed require more than resistance to treatment and are more
descriptive of listing-level severity. The final criteria for evaluating
Kaposi's sarcoma (final Listings 14.08E2 and 114.08E2) require more than
limited superficial lesions; they require extensive oral lesions, or
visceral involvement, or skin or mucous membrane lesions of sufficient
severity to satisfy the criteria in final Listings 14.08F and 114.08F,
Conditions of the skin or mucous membranes. Of course, the condition may
also be evaluated under the final functional listings in 14.08N and
114.08O. In the case of peripheral neuropathy (final Listings 14.08H2 and
114.08H), the disorder must be assessed either under the appropriate
neurological listings in 11.00 and 111.00 or on the basis of functional
limitations under final Listings 14.08N and 114.08O. In order to make
clear that HIV-related peripheral neuropathy may be evaluated under the
neurological listings, we added cross-references to those listings
sections in final Listings 14.08H2 and 114.08H.
In addition, we developed criteria for evaluating most of the other HIV
manifestations in proposed Listings 14.08M3, 114.08L2 and 114.08M3. As we
did for peripheral neuropathy, we required the three blood disorders now
in final Listings 14.08G and 114.08G—anemia (proposed Listings
14.08M3a and 114.08M3a), granulocytopenia (proposed Listings 14.08M3b and
114.08M3b), and thrombocytopenia (proposed Listings 14.08M3c and
114.08M3c)—to meet the criteria of other listings (in 7.00 and
107.00, the listings for the hemic and lymphatic system). Even in the case
of an individual with HIV infection, the blood count figures alone do not
show how an individual is able to function.
We also developed stand-alone medical listings for mucosal candidiasis,
including vulvovaginal candidiasis (proposed Listings 14.08M3f and
114.08M3f, final Listings 14.08F and 114.08F), Herpes zoster (proposed
Listings 14.08M3h and 114.08M3h, final Listings 14.08D and 114.08D),
dermatological conditions such as eczema and psoriasis (proposed Listings
14.08M3i, 114.08L2g, and 114.08M3i, final Listings 14.08F and 114.08F),
diarrhea (proposed Listings 14.08M3j, 114.08L2f, and 114.08M3j, final
Listings 14.08J and 114.08J), and radiographically documented sinusitis
(proposed Listings 14.08M3k, 114.08L2i, and 114.08M3k, final Listings
14.08M6 and 114.08N6).
Although we agree with the comment that the remaining manifestations in
proposed Listings 14.08M3, 114.08L2 and 114.08M3 (fever, weight loss,
hepatomegaly, splenomegaly, parotitis, oral hairy leukoplakia, and
lymphadenopathy) can have functional ramifications, their effects on an
adult's ability to work or a child's ability to function in an
age-appropriate manner vary from individual to individual and, thus,
listing-level severity cannot be defined in solely medical terms.
Therefore, these manifestations, along with other manifestations of HIV
infection that do not meet the criteria in final Listings 14.08A-M or
114.08A-114.08N, will continue to be evaluated with functional criteria
under final Listings 14.08N and 114.08O.
Comment: Another comment questioned
the addition of functional requirements to the criteria for HIV wasting
syndrome.
Response: We did not list HIV
wasting syndrome in proposed Listing 14.08M3 (or proposed childhood
Listing 114.08M3); we proposed a separate Listing 14.08H (final Listing
14.08I) which provided that any person with HIV wasting syndrome had an
impairment that met the listing. In the childhood listings, we provided a
cross-reference to the proposed adult rule, in the ninth paragraph of
proposed 114.00C.
We believe that the commenters misunderstood our intent in proposed
Listings 14.08M3 and 114.08M3. HIV wasting syndrome is defined as an
involuntary weight loss of more than 10 percent of baseline body weight
and either chronic diarrhea or chronic weakness and documented fever
greater than 100.4o F (38o C) for the majority of 1 month or longer.
Although it is true that in proposed Listings 14.08M3 and 114.08M3 we
listed all three of the criteria that may define HIV wasting syndrome
(fever, weight loss, and diarrhea), we did not intend to list true HIV
wasting syndrome in the functional listing but a lesser manifestation of
HIV infection. An individual with true HIV wasting syndrome would have
already been found to have an impairment that met the criteria of proposed
Listing 14.08H. The individuals who could have met the criteria of
proposed Listing 14.08M3 were those who did not have all of the findings
needed to define HIV wasting syndrome, but who were nevertheless
significantly limited in their functioning because of their
manifestations.
For reasons we have already explained in the summary of provisions, we
have established separate listings, final Listings 14.08J and 114.08J, to
make diarrhea a stand-alone medical condition, but we have not listed
fever and weight loss separately, except insofar as they define HIV
wasting syndrome. However, these two medical findings, as well as diarrhea
of lesser severity than in the stand-alone medical listings, may still be
found to be of listing-level severity under final Listings 14.08N and
114.08O.
Comment: Some commenters suggested
that we consider additional manifestations of HIV infection in conjunction
with the functional standards in proposed Listing 14.08M3. The commenters
suggested many specific manifestations, including joint aches, arthritis,
or arthralgias, recurrent cystitis, fatigue, chronic headaches, chronic
sleep disturbance, chronic shortness of breath or exertional dyspnea, and
HIV-related mental disorders. Various comments on the childhood listings
also suggested that we add chronic and recurrent otitis media associated
with functional limitations.
Response: As we have said, instead
of making the lists longer, but still finite, we decided to revise the
functional listings so that they would include any possible manifestation
of HIV infection. Therefore, we no longer list any manifestations
explicitly, only a few examples. The revisions in final Listing 114.08O
are sufficient to allow adjudicators to evaluate chronic and recurrent
otitis media when it is a manifestation of HIV infection. Additionally,
sequelae from otitis media, such as hearing loss or brain abscess, or any
other manifestations of HIV infection in children or adults, can be
evaluated under the appropriate listing or at the last steps of the
sequential evaluation processes.
Comment: A number of commenters
believed that the CD4 lymphocyte count required in proposed Listings
14.08M1 and 114.08M1 should be considered enough to establish
listing-level severity without the additional requirement to meet the
functional criteria. Some commenters stated that the proposed CD4 count
less than or equal to 200 cells/mm3 (or 14 percent or less lymphocytes)
was too low, especially if we linked it to functioning; others stated that
it was too high.
Many suggested various alternatives. At least one comment asked us not to
use any particular CD4 count as a measure of disability at all because
each individual situation is different; the comment said that it would be
unfair to label as disabled all individuals with low CD4 counts, when many
such individuals are still functioning well. One commenter suggested a
specific description of the standard for using CD4 lymphocyte counts, and
suggested specific language to clarify the discussion of CD4 lymphocyte
counts in the third paragraph of proposed 14.00D.
Response: We have deleted the CD4
criterion from the final rules. We realize that, although a decreased CD4
count is a gauge of an individual's potential for developing a serious
opportunistic infection or other manifestation of HIV, with improved
treatment and prophylaxis for certain opportunistic diseases one cannot
reliably predict when an individual will develop a disabling
manifestation. Further, the laboratory finding does not show whether the
individual is functionally limited. There are many cases of individuals
with very low CD4 counts (often far below 200) who exhibited few or no
functional restrictions, and other individuals with much higher CD4 counts
who were seriously impaired. Indeed, we received comments from such an
individual, who related his own story of living with HIV infection and
working even though his CD4 count was below 100.
We agreed completely with the many commenters who stated that such
individuals are at risk of becoming disabled. However, our disability
programs require an assessment of whether an individual is disabled
currently, without regard to whether the individual may become disabled at
some point in the future. Because there is so much variability in the
state of health and functioning of individuals with any given CD4 count we
could not adopt the suggestions to use a specific CD4 count alone (at any
level) as a listing criterion.
Proposed 14.08M4, 114.08L3, and 114.08M4:
The Functional Criteria
Comment: Many commenters said that
the functional criteria were overly burdensome and restrictive and should
be eliminated entirely. Some of these commenters believed that linking
manifestations of HIV disease to a functional test ignored the progressive
nature of the disease and created a higher level of severity than
established by other listings. One commenter suggested extensive revisions
in the paragraphs explaining the functional criteria in proposed 14.00D,
and provided specific language for such revisions.
Response: For reasons we have given
in the explanation of the final rules, we did not eliminate the functional
criteria. Our intent in proposing the functional criteria in Listings
14.08M, 114.08L, and 114.08M was to include in the listings many
individuals for whom we thought we could not provide solely medical
criteria. For instance, the functional listings include a group of
individuals who would be very difficult to describe in strictly medical
terms—individuals who become ill then improve, only to repeatedly
become ill again, either with the same manifestation of HIV infection or
with something different. The functional listings also provide a listing
for those individuals whose impairments might not be at listing-level
severity for all individuals, but that are actually of listing-level
severity for the particular individuals given their effects, such as pain,
other symptoms, and the consequences of medication, that vary greatly with
the individual. They help to ensure a finding of disability for any person
whose impairment(s) actually prevents him or her from engaging in any
gainful activity, or of any SSI claimant child whose impairment(s)
actually prevents him or her from independently, appropriately, and
effectively engaging in age-appropriate activities, even though that
impairment(s) might not impose similar limitations on other
individuals.
Moreover, we believe that, in view of the fact that we have made most of
the proposed manifestations into stand-alone medical listings, we have
accommodated the comments that asked us to delete the functional listings.
The functional criteria now only provide another way to find disabled
individuals who have most of the manifestations we proposed in Listings
14.08M, 114.08L, and 114.08M.
Based on other comments, however, we have significantly modified the
proposed functional criteria to make them more applicable to cases
involving HIV infection and to better express our original intent. We have
also revised the paragraphs in the final rules that explain the functional
criteria (final 14.00D8). The functional criteria for both adults and
children are no longer tied to a finite list of specific medical
conditions; any manifestation or combination of manifestations may now be
evaluated under this listing. Additionally, the final rules require an
adult to demonstrate limitations of functioning in only one of three areas
of functioning, rather than the proposed two of four. We describe these
rules and our reasons for the changes in subsequent comments.
Comment: Many commenters pointed out
that under the functional equivalence policy in § 416.926a(b)(3), any
child who has listing-level deficits in the functional domains of the
listings in 112.00 is considered disabled regardless of the nature of the
impairment. They said it was, therefore, not necessary to include the
functional criteria in proposed Listings 114.08L and 114.08M, because
these criteria did no more than recodify existing policy.
Response: We disagree. The part B
listings are used to evaluate claims filed under both title II and title
XVI of the Act if the claimant is under age 18. The functional equivalence
policy in § 416.926a(b)(3), however, applies only to claims for SSI
filed under title XVI. Even though SSI claims constitute the great
majority of childhood disability applications, it is possible for
individuals under age 18 to apply for disability benefits (both as
disabled minor children and as workers) under title II. Functional
equivalence does not apply in these cases, and such children could be
disadvantaged by removal of the rule.
Comment: Many commenters said that
the proposed HIV listing was the first and only adult physical impairment
listing to require a functional test in order to qualify for benefits, and
to do so violated various antidiscrimination laws. One comment indicated
that the listing should exist solely to provide SSA with medical criteria
for the purpose of making disability determinations.
Response: The commenters were not
correct. Even though the listing for evaluation of HIV infection is the
first to contain functional criteria similar to those in the mental body
system, other physical body system listings, such as (but not limited to)
several in the neurological and musculoskeletal body systems, include
functional criteria among their requirements. We also believe that we have
the statutory authority to include functional criteria in the listings
because the listings are not intended to include all possible impairments
(see, e.g., Sullivan v. Zebley, 493 U.S 521 (1990)) and because our rules
ensure that all disabled individuals have an opportunity to establish that
they are disabled under the Act. In any case, we have provided stand-alone
criteria for most of the manifestations we had proposed to link to
functioning, as well as some others that affect women, girls, and other
groups of people with HIV infection. Therefore, the final rules do not
discriminate against any group of people, but broaden the listings to
include more people.
We also do not agree that the listings may include only medical criteria.
Functional criteria not only provide an important avenue to allow
individuals whose HIV-related conditions impose functional limitations,
but, perhaps most importantly, they reflect a true outcome of the illness.
Even the strictly medical criteria in the listings have implied functional
consequences. By definition, claimants with impairments meeting or
equaling listed medical criteria cannot work, and this inability to
work—a functional assessment—is the underlying statutory
criterion on which the entire disability program is based.
Comment: Several commenters said
that requiring functional criteria in the adult listing would prevent
adults with HIV infection from establishing their disabilities at the
earliest possible point in time. They said that the functional criteria
could cause the same delays for gathering and weighing evidence as the
commenters believe occur when we assess residual functional capacity when
a claimant's severe impairment(s) does not meet or equal in severity any
listing. Some commenters said that the requirement for 2 months'
persistence of the manifestations in proposed Listings 14.08M3 and
114.08M3 would create a 2-month processing delay.
Response: The effect of the
functional criteria may actually be to expedite case processing. The
functional criteria do not come into play unless the individual does not
have an impairment that meets the requirements of one of the preceding
listings. We also follow a general policy in all cases of curtailing
development when there is sufficient evidence to properly allow a claim;
if the evidence shows medical equivalence to one of the listings, we would
not further develop the claim simply to establish whether the individual
has an impairment that meets final Listing 14.08N. Therefore, the
provision applies only to individuals for whom we would have to assess
functioning at later steps of the sequential evaluation process:
Individuals who have severe impairments that do not meet the medical
listings and for whom we would have to perform a residual functional
capacity assessment if we did not have this listing.
The assessment of residual functional capacity is a much more refined
evaluation than is required under final Listing 14.08N. Whereas final
Listing 14.08N only requires a judgment about whether an individual is
markedly impaired in a broad area of functioning, a residual functional
capacity assessment is a detailed evaluation of the claimant's ability to
do particular physical and mental work-related activities. Both
evaluations rely on the same kinds of evidence, so the new listing will
not require additional time spent to develop evidence. If anything,
individuals who meet this listing may not have to present as much evidence
of their ability to function as to function as they would have to for the
more detailed residual functional capacity assessment. Furthermore, the
actual assessment of functioning under the listing is quicker than the
residual functional capacity assessment and does not require evaluation
under the medical-vocational rules.
In fact, there has been no evidence that using functional criteria since
December 17, 1991, has delayed decisions made on cases involving HIV
infection. We updated our procedures for evaluating HIV infection under an
interpretive ruling we have been following since December 17, 1991
(Social Security Ruling (SSR) 91-8p,
"Titles II and XVI: Evaluation of Human Immunodeficiency Virus
Infection," 56 FR 65498, December 17, 1991). The experience we have
using SSR 91-8p
indicates that claims involving HIV infection are being processed
expeditiously. We believe, therefore, that—far from delaying case
adjudication—the new listing will speed the processing of many
claims and permit more cases to be adjudicated at the listing level than
would otherwise be possible.
With regard to the comment about the delays that might have been caused by
the criteria requiring 2 months' persistence of the manifestations in
proposed Listings 14.08M3 and 114.08M3, we have deleted those rules, as
already explained.
Comment: Many commenters said that
if we retained functional criteria in the final adult and childhood
listings, the requirement should be to demonstrate marked limitations in
only one area of functioning (for adults) or one functional domain (for
children). They thought that for adults this was equivalent to the
threshold we previously used in our operating instructions in effect prior
to December 17, 1991. Some commenters were particularly concerned that the
proposed rules for adults would be stricter than the rules they would
replace by requiring a higher level of functional impairment.
Response: Even though we have
changed the standard for adults to require marked limitations in one of
the three functional areas, we do not agree that the proposed rules set a
higher level of severity than was in our previous operating instructions,
nor was that our intent. Indeed, under our prior instructions, an
individual needed help with most activity, including climbing stairs,
shopping, cooking, and housework, in order to establish a
"marked" restriction of activities of daily living. In the
nineteenth paragraph of 14.00D of the NPRM, an individual who was unable
to perform activities independently most of the time had a
"marked" limitation of activities of daily living. We further
defined a "marked" limitation in the seventeenth paragraph of
the section as arising "when several activities or function are
impaired or even when only one is impaired, so long as the degree of
limitation is such as to seriously interfere with the ability to function
independently, appropriately, and effectively."
More fundamentally, and as we have already explained in the summary of
provisions above, the proposed functional criteria for adults effectively
permitted a finding of disability based on marked limitations in only one
functional area if the individual also suffered episodic bouts of illness.
Whereas activities of daily living, social functioning, and concentration,
persistence or pace clearly describe functioning, the fourth area,
repeated episodes of deterioration or decompensation in work or work-like
settings, referred to episodes of illness. (This is not true for people
with mental disorders, where the episodes of deterioration or
decompensation may result from the stress of the work or work-like
setting, but it is true in the context of HIV infection.) Thus, an
individual who experienced the required episodes of illness in proposed
Listing 14.08M4d and met only one of the three functional criteria in
proposed Listing 14.08M4a-c would have had an impairment that met the
listing.
This is not to say that all individuals could have met the listing in this
way. Some would not have suffered episodic manifestations and, therefore,
would have had to meet two of the three functional criteria in proposed
Listing 14.08M4a-c. However, it has been our experience, contrary to the
beliefs of many commenters, that individuals who are markedly limited in
one of the areas of functioning also demonstrate marked limitations in one
of the other areas; the requirement for limitations in two areas merely
validated the finding of disability. Indeed, we have been using the same
procedures under
SSR 91-8p and have
allowed many cases under this interpretive ruling.
As we have already explained in the summary, and in response to the
comments, we revised final Listing 14.08M inasmuch as the fourth proposed
functional criterion described the universe of individuals we were trying
to capture in the listing. In the final rule, the fourth criterion from
the proposed listing is now the threshold criterion for the listing and
the individual must meet one of three functional criteria.
A similar change in the number of functional domains that must be limited
in a childhood case is not appropriate. The criteria a child has to meet
to be considered under the listing (i.e., the child must have a
manifestation of HIV infection that does not satisfy any of the criteria
in final Listings 114.08A-N) are not repeated in the functional domains,
are not analogous to the areas of functioning used in evaluating adult
cases, and differ with the age of the child.
Comment: Many commenters thought
that the "marked" level of restriction required in the proposed
adult functional criteria was too severe. They were particularly critical
of the definition of "marked" as occurring "most of the
time" in the paragraphs that defined the first three functional
criteria. Some commenters suggested that "marked" connoted a
level of functional restriction commensurate with almost total
incapacitation, i.e., bed confinement or requiring nursing home care, and
said that this reflected a higher level of restriction than is required to
establish disability under the Act. Some also suggested that individuals
would be disabled even if they were not limited "most of the
time" but were limited to some lesser extent.
Response: We never intended
"marked" to be interpreted as requiring total incapacitation
(as, indeed, it does not in the mental body system listings). We proposed
language to underscore this intent in the seventeenth paragraph of 14.00D
in the NPRM, which, with minor language changes, is now the fifth
paragraph of 14.00D8 in the final rules. In that paragraph, we first
defined "marked" as being on a continuum between
"moderate" and "extreme" to make the point that there
is a more severe limitation than a "marked" limitation; that is,
an "extreme" limitation. If "marked" meant total
debility, it clearly would have left no room on the scale of severity for
"extreme" limitation. We then stated that a marked limitation
could arise "when several activities or functions are impaired or
even when only one is impaired, so long as the degree of limitation is
such as to seriously interfere with the ability to function independently,
appropriately, and effectively." By indicating that a marked
limitation might result from limitations of only several activities, or
even only one activity, and by using the phrase "seriously
interfere," we again meant to say that the individual need not have
been totally debilitated.
We did, however, intend to establish a level of limitation that is higher
than is required to establish disability under the Act. This is because
all listed impairments in part A and part B define a more severe level of
disability than is defined in the Act. The standard of disability in the
statute is based on an inability to engage in "any substantial
gainful activity" (see sections 216(i), 223(d), and 1614(a) of the
Act). Under §§ 404.1525(a) and 416.925(a) of our regulations,
however, we explain that the listings describe impairments that are
considered severe enough to prevent a person from doing "any gainful
activity." Similarly, the regulations defining disability in children
provide that "comparable severity" to a disability in an adult
means a substantial reduction in the ability to function independently,
appropriately, and effectively in an age-appropriate manner (see §
416.924(a)). The listings, however, describe impairments that
"prevent" a child from functioning independently,appropriately,
and effectively in an age-appropriate manner (see §§ 416.924(e)
and 416.926a(a)).
The point is that the listings are meant to be a screening device by which
we can decide relatively quickly that an individual is disabled, without
the need to proceed to the final steps of the sequential evaluation
processes. It is at the final steps of the sequential evaluation processes
for adults and children that we determine whether individuals have
impairments that meet the statutory definition of disability. Disability
under the listings is so severe that we know that there is no need to
proceed further because a finding of disability would result even if we
proceeded through all the steps of the sequential evaluation
processes.
Nevertheless, the comments made us realize two things: First, that we
could have more clearly stated that "marked" does not mean total
incapacity, and second, that the standard of "most of the time"
was unnecessarily inflexible. Consequently, we revised the description of
"marked" to explain our intent more clearly. We now state
plainly in the fifth paragraph of final 14.00D8 that "an individual
need not be totally precluded from performing an activity to have a marked
limitation * * *." We also added language in the fifth paragraph that
describes "marked" in qualitative terms and makes clear that a
"marked" restriction in function is not defined by any frequency
of occurrences but by the degree of interference with function. We also
state plainly that "marked" is not intended to imply that a
person is confined to bed, hospitalized, or in a nursing home. This allows
us the flexibility to determine whether a limitation is "marked"
on a case-by-case basis. In each of the sixth, seventh, and eighth
paragraphs of final 14.00D8 (which define the three functional areas, and
correspond to the nineteenth, twentieth, and twenty-first paragraphs of
proposed 14.00D) we eliminated the sentences that included the phrase
"most of the time" and revised the remaining discussions to be
more descriptive of our intent.
We did not simply revise "most of the time" to a shorter period,
as some commenters suggested, because we believe the attempt was fraught
with the same pitfalls that the commenters pointed out for the phrase we
proposed. Furthermore, because we say that "marked" may involve
only one activity or several activities, a criterion for less frequent
interference could result in unintended variations in severity levels
depending on which activities or other functions were limited.
Comment: Many commenters thought
that it was inappropriate to use, nearly verbatim, the functional criteria
language from the mental listings to describe the functional limitations
in proposed Listings 14.08M, 114.08L and 114.08M. Although some commenters
said they could appreciate the need to link functional limitations to
physical disorders, they thought it was inappropriate to apply mental
listing criteria to physical impairments.
Response: We do not agree that it is
inappropriate to apply these functional criteria to physical disorders
because the criteria are generic; they do not describe mental functions,
but broad areas of functioning that are relevant to any adult's ability to
work or any child's ability to independently, appropriately and
effectively engage in age-appropriate activity. As we have explained in
the summary of the final rules, these activities describe what people do
and how well they do it on a day-to-day basis. For our purposes, it is
immaterial whether an individual has difficulty doing chores or
maintaining concentration because of a mental disorder or because of
fatigue, weakness, pain, headaches, frequent diarrhea, or any other
physical problem; the person still has the limitation that results from a
medically determinable impairment(s).
However, as we have also said, we have modified the proposed language in
final 14.00D8 to make it even more specific to individuals with HIV
infection. As we have previously explained, we also removed the fourth
"functional" criterion in proposed Listing 14.08M4d.
We also repeat that, by revising proposed Listings 14.08M, 114.08L and
114.08M to make most of the proposed manifestations into stand-alone
medical listings and to broaden the applicability of the final functional
listings to include any manifestation or combinations of manifestations,
final Listings 14.08N and 114.08O are only advantageous to claimants. They
merely provide another means for people to show that they are disabled
under the listings.
Comment: A number of commenters
specifically commented that the area of social functioning is meant to
measure an individual's psychiatric condition and is not appropriate for
the evaluation of HIV. They were especially concerned that an individual
could be denied disability benefits because he or she
"socialized" with family and friends.
Response: The commenters
misunderstood our intent; we have, therefore, clarified the rules. We have
always recognized that there is a difference between visiting with family
and close friends, who may make special allowances for an impaired
individual, and independent social functioning. Furthermore, the ability
to interact with other people can be affected by a physical impairment.
For instance, an individual who is fatigued my have difficulty going out
or sustaining conversation. In addition, many individuals with
manifestations of HIV infection do have mental findings (such as anxiety,
depression, and apathy) that can interfere with their social functioning.
Even if the mental findings are not manifestations of HIV infection, or
are the only manifestations of the HIV infection, we still consider their
effect on the individual's functioning together with any other
manifestations.
To make our intent clearer, we have revised the language of the seventh
paragraph of final 14.00D8 in response to the comments. Final 14.00D8
states that marked difficulty of social functioning means that an
individual "cannot engage in social interaction on a sustained basis
(even though he or she is able to communicate with close friends or
relatives) * * *." It is also important to note that, under the final
listing, social functioning is only one area of functioning among three,
each one of which can establish disability at the listing level.
Comment: Several commenters thought
that the fourth functional test requirement in the adult listing, i.e.,
"repeated episodes of decompensation," was too severe and went
beyond what is necessary to prevent an adult from working. The commenters
suggested that this criterion be revised to more accurately reflect the
reality of the exacerbations and remissions in HIV-related illnesses and
the need to be absent from work for treatment.
Response: We have already explained
how we revised proposed Listing 14.08M in the summary of provisions and
the foregoing responses. In the third paragraph of final 14.08D8, we
retained the provision for manifestations occurring on an average of 3
times a year, or once every 4 months, and each lasting at least 2 weeks,
but changed it to one provision among several alternatives instead of an
absolute requirement. We now also provide that the manifestations may last
for less than 2 weeks and occur substantially more frequently than 3 times
a year or every 4 months, or that they may occur less frequently than 3
times a year or once every 4 months but last substantially longer than 2
weeks each time. We believe this better reflects the variety of patterns
of episodic illness experienced by persons with HIV infection.
We do not agree, however, that the proposed criterion was incompatible
with the ability to work in and of itself. It described an individual who
missed 6 weeks of work during the course of a whole year because of
illness. Although we do not mean to suggest that missing work for 2 weeks
at a time 3 times in a year is not serious, we do not believe that it is
so serious in itself that we could conclude that the individual was
disabled for 12 months, as required by the statute. This is why we also
require an accompanying indication of marked functional limitations in the
final rule.
Comment: Several commenters stated
that in setting the adult functional standards, we should evaluate
individuals based on both current functional ability and likely future
loss of capacity.
Response: The Act requires that an
individual be disabled during the period covered by the individual's
application. This usually means that the individual must be currently
disabled, although we may find disability in the past under title II
within the time limits covered by the application. However, we are never
permitted to find an individual disabled based on a prediction that the
individual will become disabled in the future. There is no provision in
the statute that would permit us to overlook a claimant's current
favorable level of function because it is expected his or her condition
will worsen at some future time. Our policy is to advise individuals to
reapply for disability benefits at such time as the condition precludes
substantial work activity.
Comment: Numerous commenters
suggested that we use functional tests like the Karnofsky Performance
Status instead of the proposed functional criteria.
Response: We did not adopt the
comments. The Karnofsky Performance Status is not a "functional
test," but a physician's estimate of functional status. We do not
think, however, that the Karnofsky or other available tests are
sufficiently broad or objective to use in place of our functional
criteria, as the standard for measuring functional capacity in HIV-related
disability claims.
Comment: Several commenters said
that we should develop a special form to capture information regarding a
claimant's functional limitations and train our Field Office and State
agency personnel to properly elicit this information. Some were interested
in working with us to develop the form, as well as to develop a national
800-number and telefax service for the dictation of physician narratives
and medical documentation.
Response: Developing evidence of
functional limitations is not new to Field Office or State agency
employees. The disability application forms include basic questions
regarding evidence of functional limitations and are sufficient to make a
determination in many cases. The State agencies develop additional
evidence regarding function from a variety of medical and non-medical
sources when that is necessary. Although we appreciate the commenters'
offers, at this time we do not believe a special form is needed for either
the Field Offices or the State agencies. Also, because medical
determinations are made locally, a national telephone/telefax service for
physician narratives and medical documentation would not be practical. We
believe these kinds of services are best when designed and implemented
locally in order to meet the particular needs of the area.
HIV Manifestations Suggested as Additions to the Listings
Comment: A number of commenters
suggested adding other manifestations of HIV infection to the listings,
such as: anemia, arthritis, oral candidiasis (oral thrush), chronic
shortness of breath or exertional dyspnea, chronic sleep disorders,
hepatitis (including hepatitis caused by cytomegalovirus), extrapulmonary
pneumocystis, fatigue, HIV myositis, leukemia, lymphocytic interstitial
pneumonitis, microsporidiosis, mucormycosis, neoplasia, pancytopenia,
pulmonary aspergillosis, recurrent giardiasis, renal failure, squamous
carcinoma of the genitals, side effects of antiretroviral therapy,
syphilis and neurosyphilis. (We discuss other suggested additions to the
listings—including several that are specific to women—in
subsequent comments and responses).
Some of these commenters suggested specific criteria to be included (e.g.,
chronic anemia with persistent hemoglobin of less than 10 percent or
hematocrit of less than 30 percent, or requiring transfusions more often
than twice yearly). Other commenters simply identified the symptoms (e.g.,
dyspnea) or conditions they thought should be included, without describing
any particular level of severity. When a commenter suggested adding a
medical condition to the listing but did not include criteria describing
impairment severity, we were often unable to discern whether the commenter
was asking that we develop listing criteria for that manifestation, or
asking that we consider the mere existence of the manifestation in an
individual with HIV infection to be listing-level severity. In order to
ensure that we considered every comment, we considered both possible
interpretations of the comment.
Response: We adopted some of these
comments, partially adopted others, and did not adopt others.
In response to the comments, we added the following manifestations of HIV
infection to the listing without any qualifying criteria: extrapulmonary
pneumocystis carinii infection (final Listings 14.08C2 and 114.08C2);
mucormycosis (final Listings 14.08B6 and 114.08B6); and aspergillosis
(final Listings 14.08B1 and 114.08B1). An individual with HIV infection
and any one of these manifestations has an impairment that meets the
listing.
To the extent that the commenters were suggesting that we include any
other manifestations in the HIV listings without any qualifying criteria,
we did not adopt the suggestions. The information we obtained and the
medical literature indicated that, although the other manifestations
suggested by the commenters can be disabling, they need not be.
Consequently, the assessment of severity must be made based on criteria
beyond the mere presence of the manifestation. In order to be responsive
to the comments, we attempted to develop a listing-level standard for each
suggested addition to the listings, using qualifying criteria to indicate
impairment severity.
The listings now include microsporidiosis (final Listings 14.08C1 and
114.08C1), if it results in diarrhea lasting for 1 month or longer; and
septic arthritis (final Listings 14.08M4 and 114.08N4) if it is resistant
to treatment or requires hospitalization or intravenous treatment 3 or
more times in 1 year. These criteria were developed based on the
information we obtained.
Some of the HIV manifestations that commenters suggested as additions to
the listings may be evaluated under existing listings; consequently, we
did not add new criteria for them. These include: oral candidiasis (which
is evaluated under final Listings 14.08F and 114.08F, Conditions of the
skin or mucous membranes, or 14.08M and 114.08N, for other multiple
infection, or under the appropriate body system listing); leukemia (which
is evaluated under the criteria in Listing 7.11, 7.12, 13.27, or 107.11);
giardiasis (which is evaluated under final Listings 14.08J and 114.08J);
and pancytopenia (which is evaluated under final Listings 14.08G and
114.08G or under the criteria in 7.00ff and 107.00ff).
Syphilis and neurosyphilis are also manifestations that may be evaluated
under existing listings. However, because of their frequency in
individuals with HIV infection, we added Listings 14.08A4 and 114.08A4 to
remind adjudicators that HIV infection can make this illness more
difficult to treat and to ensure that they look for sequelae of the
disease. For the same reason, we added Listings 14.08D5 and 114.08D5 for
evaluating viral hepatitis. We did not distinguish in the final listings
between CMV hepatitis and other forms; therefore, CMV hepatitis is
included under these final listings.
The NPRM included criteria for evaluating various malignant neoplasms.
Final Listings 14.08E and 114.08E are expressly for the evaluation of
malignant neoplasms. The NPRM also included criteria for renal failure, in
proposed Listing 14.08L. The general term "nephropathy" means
disease of the kidneys and would, therefore, encompass renal (i.e.,
kidney) failure. Nephropathy is now included in both the adult and
childhood listings at final Listings 14.08L and 114.08M, which are
cross-references to the criteria in 6.00ff and 106.00ff.
We did not adopt the suggestions to add listing criteria for the following
manifestations of HIV infection because the manifestations are either
symptoms, signs, or medical findings that must be evaluated based on the
underlying medical condition: dyspnea, sleep disorder, or fatigue.
We did not adopt the suggestion to include criteria for squamous cell
carcinoma of the genitals because the condition is not necessarily
disabling, even in an individual with HIV infection, and may be evaluated
under the listings for malignant neoplasms in 13.00 and 113.00 or as other
skin conditions under the criteria in final Listings 14.08F and
114.08F.
Likewise, HIV myositis and arthritis are not necessarily disabling in
individuals with HIV infection, and these disorders may be evaluated under
existing criteria in 1.00ff. HIV myositis may also be evaluated under the
criteria in final Listings 14.05 and 114.05, and septic arthritis under
the criteria in final Listings 14.08M and 114.08N.
The NPRM included criteria for lymphocytic interstitial pneumonia (LIP) in
children. We did not adopt the suggestion to add criteria for adults
because the condition is uncommon in adults, is usually accompanied by
other manifestations of HIV infection, and would likely cause respiratory
symptoms that could be evaluated appropriately under 3.00ff., or under
final Listing 14.08N.
The term "recurrent cystitis" describes many different types of
bladder inflammation that occur commonly in individuals who have HIV
infection and individuals who do not. Evaluation under the listings will
depend on the type of inflammation (e.g., bacterial cystitis may be
evaluated under final Listings 14.08A5 and 114.08A6). Separate criteria
for cystitis are not warranted because the condition is often not
functionally limiting. If it is, and if it does not meet the criteria of
any of the stand-alone medical listings, it may still meet the criteria of
the functional listings, 14.08N and 114.08O.
In response to the comment about the side-effects of antiretroviral
therapy, we supplemented the discussion of the effects of treatment in
final 14.00D7 and 114.00D7, to make it clearer that we always consider the
effects of treatment when evaluating disability. We have included
"antiretroviral agents" as an example of treatment in these
sections.
It is important to remember that any severe HIV manifestations not
specifically included in the listings (including any of the manifestations
discussed above that we declined to add) may still be evaluated based on
their functional consequences under final Listings 14.08N and 114.08O, or
at later steps of the sequential evaluation processes for adults and
children.
Comment: A few commenters questioned
whether the HIV infection listing adequately considered the effects of
mental disorders such as depression or anxiety, which are common among
HIV-infected individuals. They expressed concern that an individual who
had HIV infection would nevertheless have to meet a specific mental
disorder listing without consideration of the factors of HIV infection and
its symptoms. Some commenters suggested that we add depression and anxiety
as manifestations of HIV infection.
Response: We agree that many
individuals with HIV infection display signs and symptoms of mental
disorders, such as anxiety and depression. In some cases, this is a
reaction to the condition, similar to that of many individuals afflicted
with other serious disorders, such as cancer or heart disease, and may be
a mental disorder in itself. In some cases, the mental findings may be
manifestations of the underlying HIV infection. For example, mental signs
associated with HIV encephalopathy are, of course, manifestations of the
illness. Some people who have HIV infection may have mental disorders that
are unrelated to the HIV infection but nevertheless contribute to their
limitations; for example, individuals who abuse drugs may have a mental
disorder related to their use of drugs.
However, regardless of whether the mental findings are signs or symptoms
of an underlying disorder, mental impairments in and of themselves, or
symptoms of mental impairments, can vary in their severity and impact on
each individual's functioning. We, therefore, believe that it is
appropriate to evaluate these kinds of mental findings either under our
mental listings or under final Listings 14.08N and 114.08O, in both of
which we are required to consider their impact on the person's
functioning. The mental listings contain criteria not only for the
evaluation of depression and anxiety disorders (Listings 12.04, 12.06,
112.04 and 112.06) but other disorders that include these findings among
their signs and symptoms. Moreover, Listings 12.02 and 112.02, Organic
mental disorders, are listings specifically for people who experience
psychological or behavioral abnormalities associated with organic brain
dysfunction. Therefore, these listings would include mental manifestations
caused by HIV.
We also repeat that the test of disability involves much more than a
requirement that an impairment meet (or equal in severity) any listing,
and that disability may also be established at the last steps of the
sequential evaluation processes.
Comment: Many commenters suggested
including listing criteria for genital ulcers or genital herpes. Some
suggested specific listing criteria, such as chronic genital ulcers;
chronic genital ulcers persisting for more than 1 month; chronic gential
ulcers that fail to respond to treatment and persist for more than 4
weeks; chronic genital ulcers caused by a sexually transmitted disease
that fail to respond to treatment and persist for more than 4 weeks;
recurrent herpes simplex; recurrent herpes with lesions that have not been
documented to last 4 weeks, but that recur more often than every 8 weeks
or that are incompletely suppressed despite continuous maintenance
therapy.
Other commenters simply identified the conditions they thought should be
included (e.g., genital herpes), without describing any particular level
of severity.
Response: As we noted above, we
considered both possible interpretations of these comments; i.e., that the
commenters thought the mere existence of the condition was sufficient to
establish disability or that the commenters thought we could devise
severity criteria. To the extent that the commenters were suggesting that
we include these conditions without additional criteria describing
impairment severity (such that any individual with HIV infection and
genital ulcers would have an impairment that meets the listings), we did
not adopt the suggestions. Although genital ulcerative disease can be of
disabling severity, it is not necessarily disabling. Consequently, the
assessment of severity must be based on criteria beyond the mere presence
of the disease.
Some of the comments demonstrated that our proposed criteria for Herpes
simplex (proposed Listings 14.08A5, 14.08E2, 114.08A5, and 114.08E2) were
not clear. (Many commenters recommended criteria that were essentially the
same as the criteria we proposed.) Therefore, we reorganized the proposed
listings (which became final Listings 14.08D2 and 114.08D2) to make it
clearer that genital ulcers caused by Herpes simplex that persist for 1
month or longer meet the criteria of the listing. We did not adopt the
suggestion to include Herpes simplex infection that does not last for 1
month, but recurs, because recurrence alone is not a reliable indicator of
impairment severity; an individual with recurrent minor lesions of short
duration may be completely unimpaired. Recurrent manifestations of HIV
infection may be evaluated based on the functional consequences of the
disorder in final Listings 14.08N and 114.08O.
In further response to these and other comments, we also developed general
criteria in final Listings 14.08F and 114.08F for conditions affecting the
skin and mucous membranes, which include genital ulcerative disease. For
reasons we have already given in the explanation of the final rules, the
criteria are based on the severity of the resulting lesions ("with
extensive fungating or ulcerating lesions") and the response to
treatment ("not responding to treatment").
We did not adopt the suggestion to include criteria limiting the
evaluation to ulcers caused by a sexually transmitted disease, or the
suggestion to require that the conditions be both resistant to treatment
and of a specific duration. Adopting these suggestions would have resulted
in an unnecessarily restrictive listing.
HIV Manifestations Specific to Women
Comment: Many commenters suggested
adding criteria for evaluating pelvic inflammatory disease, often called
PID. They suggested various medical criteria for describing listing-level
pelvic inflammatory disease, including: pelvic inflammatory disease
resulting in severe pain; recurrent or refractory pelvic inflammatory
disease; pelvic inflammatory disease that is persistent or resistant to
treatment; pelvic inflammatory disease of more than 1 month's duration
that does not respond to treatment; pelvic inflammatory disease with a
specific number of episodes (e.g., three or more episodes); pelvic
inflammatory disease with one episode requiring hospitalization; pelvic
inflammatory disease with one episode requiring pelvic surgery; pelvic
inflammatory disease with one episode resulting in documented chronic pain
syndrome; or some combination of the above.
Response: We responded to these
comments by developing stand-alone medical criteria that may be used to
evaluate pelvic inflammatory disease in final Listings 14.08A5 and
114.08A6. We included pelvic inflammatory disease in the childhood
listings because there are many adolescent girls who have the disease.
Although we did not fully adopt any one of the suggestions for specific
criteria to describe listing-level severity, we derived our criteria from
many of the suggestions.
We did not adopt some of the specific suggestions because they did not
represent listing-level severity. For example, we did not include a
blanket rule for pelvic inflammatory disease requiring surgery because
pelvic inflammatory disease (whether in the general population or in
individuals with HIV infection) usually responds to surgical treatment
and, therefore, will not always meet the statutory duration requirement.
Moreover, a single episode of pelvic inflammatory disease requiring
hospitalization is not an accurate predictor of continuing impairment
severity because individuals often recover satisfactorily from such an
isolated episode.
The criteria in these final rules (i.e., pelvic inflammatory disease
requiring hospitalization or intravenous antibiotic treatment 3 or more
times in 1 year) are similar to a number of the commenters' suggestions
(e.g., recurrent or refractory pelvic inflammatory disease; pelvic
inflammatory disease that is persistent or resistant to treatment; pelvic
inflammatory disease of more than a month's duration that does not respond
to treatment; pelvic inflammatory disease with a specific number of
episodes). The criteria are also based on the same premise as those
suggestions—that disability from pelvic inflammatory disease can be
measured most accurately by the persistence and severity of the infection.
We believe that the final rules are less stringent than some of the
commenters' suggestions, especially those that require more-or-less
continuous disease. The final rules may be used to evaluate claims filed
by women and girls who may recover from bouts of infection, but who suffer
from repeated infections, or who may have their infections controlled for
a time only to suffer exacerbations.
The criteria in final Listings 14.08A5 and 114.08A6 do not apply only to
pelvic inflammatory disease, but to any other multiple or recurrent
bacterial infections requiring hospitalization or intravenous antibiotic
treatment 3 or more times in 1 year. Bacterial infections, including
pelvic inflammatory disease, that do not meet these criteria but that may
be disabling because of pain, chronic illness, or other symptoms and signs
may also be evaluated under the functional criteria in final Listings
14.08N and 114.08O.
Comment: Many commenters recommended
that we revise the proposed listing-level criteria for invasive cervical
cancer, FIGO stage II, in proposed Listing 14.08J2. Some suggested that we
use stage IB because cancer at that stage usually requires the same
treatment as cancer at stage II (i.e., surgery and radiation therapy).
Other commenters suggested stage I (without indicating IA or IB), or made
no specific recommendation.
In addition, some commenters recommended that we allow evaluation of
cervical cancer not yet at FIGO stage II under the functional test in
proposed Listing 14.08M3.
Response: We did not adopt the
recommendations to list cervical cancer less than FIGO stage II as a
stand-alone listing. Impairment severity in the case of malignant tumors
is assessed by considering the site of the lesion and extent of
involvement, histogenesis of the tumor, adequacy of and response to
treatment, and any post-therapeutic residuals. We chose FIGO stage II as
the listing-level criterion for cervical cancer as a manifestation of HIV
infection because that is the minimal point at which the cancer has
advanced beyond the cervix. In FIGO stage I, the cancer is confined to the
cervix—stage IA indicates cancer that can only be seen
microscopically, and stage IB indicates a larger amount, deeper in the
tissues of the cervix, but still confined to the cervix. In stage II,
however, the cancer has spread beyond the cervix into the uterus or upper
vagina. Stage I (including IB) cervical lesions are usuallyamenable to
treatment, even in individuals with HIV infection.
The fact that the recommended treatment is the same for stages IB and II
may have clinical significance, but it says little about the potential for
ongoing functional restrictions.
Our revisions in final Listings 14.08N and 114.08O address the suggestion
to evaluate cervical cancer of a severity less than FIGO stage II at the
listing level in conjunction with functional restrictions. As we have
already explained, final Listing 14.08N allows for a finding that
manifestation of HIV infection (including cervical cancer not meeting the
criteria in Listing 14.08J) may be found to meet the listing based on the
functional consequences of the impairment.
Comment: Many commenters identified
other manifestations of HIV infection that they considered disabling to
women, and suggested that we include those manifestations in Listing
14.08. They cited many of the same manifestations that commenters
suggested as general additions to the adult listings (which we have
already discussed above), or as conditions that should not have been tied
to the functional criteria in proposed Listings 14.08M, 114.08L, and
114.08M (also discussed above). They also suggested that we add abscess of
an internal organ or body cavity, cervical dysplasia, chronic headaches,
vulvovaginal candidiasis, human papillomavirus, and vaginal condyloma. (As
noted previously, when a comment suggested adding one of these
manifestations to the listing but did not include criteria describing
impairment severity, we analyzed both possible interpretations of the
comment.) One commenter suggested extensive revisions in the tenth,
eleventh, and twelfth paragraphs of proposed 14.00D, the proposed
paragraphs discussing the evaluation of HIV infection in women. The
commenter provided specific language for such revisions.
Response: We have added to the final
listings most of the conditions suggested by the commenters by drafting
specific criteria describing listing-level severity for a wide range of
HIV-related conditions common in women. We could not, however, adopt the
suggestions to include these conditions without additional criteria
describing impairment severity. None of the conditions suggested are
necessarily disabling solely by virtue of being present with HIV
infection.
We considered all the criteria the commenters suggested for describing
impairment severity, but decided to draft original criteria based on the
suggestions and on other information about the severity and consequences
of the conditions. In many cases, the criteria we decided to use are
similar to the suggested criteria. For example, a comment suggested adding
vulvovaginal candidiasis of more than 1 month's duration that does not
respond to therapy; we decided to include all skin and mucosal conditions
with extensive ulcerating lesions not responding to treatment in final
Listings 14.08F and 114.08F. Whenever we decided to use criteria
significantly different from that suggested by the commenters, we did so
based on what is known about the severity and consequences of the
conditions.
Final Listings 14.08F and 114.08F include criteria for vulvovaginal
candidiasis and condyloma caused by human papillomavirus. Because these
conditions can affect both adults and children, especially adolescent
children, we incorporated the criteria into both part A and part B of the
listings.
Although abscesses of an internal organ or body cavity are not
specifically referred to in the final rules, they may be evaluated under
final Listings 14.08A5 and 114.08A6, which apply to multiple or recurrent
bacterial infections.
We did not adopt the suggestions to include criteria for cervical
dysplasia or headaches. Cervical dysplasia is a clinical finding, a
deviation from normal in the cells in the lining of the cervix, which may
or may not cause symptoms or progress to a more serious condition. We did
not list it as a separate condition because, although clinically
meaningful, dysplasia alone does not necessarily result in functional
limitation, and evaluation of such a condition will depend on its impact
on the individual on a case-by-case basis. Headaches are symptoms that may
be associated with a wide range of medical conditions, and should be
evaluated according to the underlying condition and our rules for the
evaluation of symptoms, including pain, in §§ 404.1529 and
416.929, which we have recently updated and made more detailed.
In the final rules, we deleted the paragraphs the last commenter asked us
to edit because vulvovaginal candidiasis, genital herpes, and pelvic
inflammatory disease are now specifically included in the final listings
as stand-alone medical conditions. Based on these revisions, the
additional language suggested by the commenter was not needed. The
guidance in final 14.00D5, Manifestations specific to women, is more
general and addresses issues of evaluation instead of specific
manifestations.
Comment: A comment suggested that we
add a discussion of HIV infection in pregnant women to the preface and
that we use different listing criteria for pregnant women. The comment
said that immunological alterations associated with pregnancy and the fact
that the CD4 count typically decreases during pregnancy raise the
possibility that HIV infection could be accelerated. For example, pregnant
women may develop opportunistic infections when their CD4 counts fall
below 300.
Response: We did not adopt the
comment. We agree that medical literature reports that the rate of CD4
cell loss in HIV-infected pregnant women is faster than in HIV-negative
pregnant women or HIV-infected men. However, as we state in final 14.00D4a
and 114.00D4a, a CD4 count in itself is not an indicator of the severity
of the HIV infection or its functional effects, or a reliable predictor of
when manifestations will occur. If pregnant women develop manifestations
of HIV, we will evaluate them in the same way that we do in other women,
examining the particular effects of their conditions on a case-by-case
basis.
Comment: Another comment noted that
we had included gynecological conditions associated with HIV infection and
functional limitations in the proposed listings. The comment said that,
since the conditions are also prevalent in HIV-negative women, we should
add listings for gynecological conditions associated with conditions other
than HIV infection, and resulting in functional limitations.
Response: We did not adopt the
comment, which was beyond the scope of these rules. However, in evaluating
the claim of a woman with or without a compromised immune system under the
listings, we will consider whether the medical findings for any
gynecological impairment, in combination with other impairments or
standing alone, are listed or are medically equivalent in severity to the
findings for the most closely analogous listed impairment.
The Childhood Listings: Other Comments
General
Comment: A number of commenters
expressed concern that the proposed childhood HIV listings did not
adequately reflect the course of the disease in children, but were merely
an extension, with minor changes, of the adult HIV listings. One comment
recommended that we limit the childhood HIV listings to those aspects
peculiar to children that are not covered by the adult HIV listings.
Response: We partially adopted the
comments, even though it is not true that the proposed childhood listings
were only an extension of the adult listings. It is simply a fact that
many of the manifestations of HIV infection in children are the same as
those in adults. Although the course of these manifestations may differ
somewhat in a child, in most instances the mere existence of a
manifestation is sufficient to establish listing-level severity. For that
reason, there was no need to provide criteria distinguishing the childhood
manifestations from criteria in the adult rules. Where the differences did
matter—for instance, in proposed Listing 114.08F (final Listing
114.08A5) (for two pyogenic bacterial infections in 2 years) and proposed
Listing 114.08J (final Listing 114.08H) (for HIV encephalopathy)—we
proposed criteria that recognized these differences.
However, we agree with the general suggestion to make the childhood
listings better reflect the course and manifestations of the disease in
children, and have revised the final listings accordingly. We revised the
discussion about the course and manifestations of HIV infection in
children in final 114.00D5, deleted most cross-references to the adult
rules, and provided more listing criteria that describe the unique
presentation of some manifestations in children. We describe the listings
changes in other comments and responses, below.
The final childhood listings still contain many of the same criteria as
the adult listings because they are appropriate to the evaluation of both
adults and children. We included these criteria in both listings, as we do
in many other body systems, to ensure the public understands the rules and
to increase ease and accuracy of adjudication by decisionmakers. Indeed,
we have added several new listings to the childhood listings that are the
same as adult listings—such as listings describing manifestations
that affect women—because we believe that it is not self-evident
that many children (especially adolescents) are unfortunately in the same
risk groups for HIV infection as many adults and, therefore, suffer from
the same manifestations.
Documentation
Comment: One comment stated that the
HIV evaluation criteria for children in the proposed rules were too vague
to be properly applied.
Response: We have responded to the
comment by clarifying 114.00D3 and 114.00D4 of the final rules, the
documentation standards for evaluating children with HIV infection, final
114.00D6, Evaluation of HIV infection in children, and final 114.00D7,
Effect of treatment.
Evidence of HIV Infection
Comment: We received many comments
about our proposal in the fifth paragraph of proposed 114.00C to use CD4
(T4) lymphocyte counts to establish the existence of HIV infection. Some
commenters agreed with the proposal that CD4 counts of 1500/mm3 or less or
20 percent or less are evidence of HIV infection for children from birth
to age 1. A few commenters believed that a CD4 count of 1000/mm3 or less
should by itself be evidence of HIV infection for children 12 to 15 months
of age. Other commenters said that CD4 counts of 750/mm3 or less should be
evidence of HIV infection for children 12 to 24 months of age.
One comment suggested that we provide language discussing the change in
CD4 counts with age.
Some commenters believed that CD4 counts of 750/mm3 or less should be the
standard for children 1 to 15 years of age. One comment said that the CD4
counts used in the childhood listings were not consistent with CDC
guidelines.
Response: We partially adopted the
comments. As we make clear in 114.00D3, antibody testing for HIV infection
is not definitive in young children because the mother's antibodies can
persist in a child up to 24 months of age, even if the child is not
infected. Therefore, we need to include criteria that would help identify
when infants who test positive for HIV antibodies are actually infected.
CD4 counts alone are generally not used to definitively diagnose HIV
infection in children, in part because there is still some debate in the
medical community about what the norms for CD4 counts in children should
be. However, the CD4 counts in these rules are used by the medical
community to begin prophylaxis for Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia, and are
sufficiently suggestive in an infant who has tested positive for HIV
antibodies to presume the existence of HIV infection.
Because of the continuing debate about the norms in children, we cannot
adopt the recommendation to use a higher CD4 count for children age 12
months to 15 months of age. However, even though we have not increased the
CD4 count threshold in the final rules, we have extended the age range for
CD4 counts of 750/mm3 or less to cover children up to 24 months of age to
make them consistent with the CDC guidelines for prophylaxis, in response
to some of the comments, and based on other information we received. We
also added two additional ways of establishing the presence of HIV
infection in response to a comment we summarize below.
We did not extend the use of CD4 counts to aid in the diagnosis of HIV
infection in children age 2 years or older because antibody testing is
definitive in these children.
Comment: One comment suggested that
we find infants who have HIV antibodies automatically eligible until such
time as their infection status can be definitively established. Another
comment suggested that we establish a listing that would allow for a
finding of disability for a child between birth and age 15 months who has
HIV antibodies and exhibits failure to thrive, diffuse lymphadenopathy, or
any form of candidiasis. The commenters stated that the presence of HIV
infection in young children can be difficult to confirm through laboratory
testing, which can be expensive and may be inconclusive.
Response: We did not adopt these
suggestions because the Act requires that disability be established in
order for the claimant to receive benefits. As one medical organization
that submitted comments noted, only about one in three infants born with
HIV antibodies actually has HIV infection.
However, in response to these and other comments, we revised final
114.00D3 to allow HIV infection to be documented based on medical history,
clinical and laboratory evidence (other than the laboratory evidence that
definitively diagnoses the impairment), and diagnoses. The documentation
must be consistent with the prevailing state of medical knowledge and
clinical practice and consistent with the other evidence. Thus, a
diagnosis of HIV infection could be established under the final rules for
a child who has HIV antibodies and exhibits failure to thrive, diffuse
lymphadenopathy, or any form of candidiasis. However, we cannot make a
blanket statement that this would, or should, always be the case, because
diagnoses of HIV infection in such cases rely on clinical judgment and the
documented facts of the individual case. For example, oral candidiasis
(oral thrush) is a very common condition in babies. If this were the only
finding in an infant with HIV serum antibodies, a doctor would have to
make a judgment, based on such factors as the severity, frequency,
duration, and response to treatment of the infection, and whether there
are other accompanying clinical findings, to decide whether the infection
is a routine infection of infancy or a sign of HIV infection.
In addition, even if the suggested signs result in a presumed diagnosis of
HIV infection, this alone would not speak to the severity of the
manifestations or their effects on the child's ability to function. HIV
infection alone, without any serious manifestations, will seldom interfere
with a child's ability to function.
Once HIV infection is documented, the child, like any person with HIV
infection, can be found disabled if his or her manifestations satisfy, or
are equivalent in severity to, the criteria in any of the HIV listings or
other listings appropriate for the evaluation of the manifestations. If
the impairment(s) of a child claimant for SSI does not meet or equal in
severity any listing, the effects of the impairment(s) on the child's
ability to function will be evaluated at the last step in the sequential
evaluation process for children.
In addition, it is important to remember that we consider all the
impairments the child has, whether related to HIV or not. Thus, if the
child could be found disabled on some other basis, e.g., a child less than
1 year of age who weighed under 1200 grams at birth, consideration of HIV
infection would not be necessary.
Comment: One comment suggested that
we include abnormal CD4/CD8 ratios and immunoglobulin G (IgG) levels
greater than or less than the normal range for age as laboratory evidence
of HIV infection in children.
Response: We adopted the comment in
final 114.00D3b(iii) and (iv). These laboratory findings are acceptable
documentation of the existence of HIV infection in children up to age 24
months who have serum antibodies for the HIV.
Comment: One comment suggested
language to revise the fifth paragraph of proposed 114.00C to expand the
discussion about the transmission of HIV antibodies and HIV infection from
mother to child and the significance of CD4 counts. The comment suggested
adding information about the low prenatal and natal HIV transmission rate
to infants, and the duration of HIV antibody persistence, and put the list
of laboratory findings in a separate paragraph.
Response: We modified and adopted
the suggested language in final 114.00D3a and b.
Comment: Another comment noted that,
although proposed 114.00C stated that the mean age of diagnosis of
children infected before or shortly after birth is 17 months, various mean
ages of diagnosis of HIV infection have been determined and diagnosis is
often made earlier.
Response: We have adopted this
comment by removing the language concerning the mean age of diagnosis of
children infected before or shortly after birth. Final 114.00D3b permits
HIV infection to be documented in children from birth to the attainment of
24 months of age based on any of four specific laboratory findings, or
based on documentation consistent with the prevailing state of medical
knowledge and clinical practice.
Comment: Several commenters said we
should delete the language in the ninth paragraph of proposed 114.00C
describing how pediatric populations may contract HIV because it was
inappropriate and irrelevant to the purpose of disability
determination.
Response: We adopted the
comment.
Symptoms and Response to Treatment
Comment: One comment said that the
criteria incorrectly assumed that children will adequately express and
document pain, fatigue, complications and/or reactions to therapy.
Response: We recognize that some
children may have a limited ability to report history, symptoms, and other
information, but we do not believe that this will have an adverse effect
on their claims. Most of the listings in final 114.08 do not include
symptoms among their criteria; rather, the criteria consist of clinical
signs and laboratory findings that will be documented in the child's
medical records. Furthermore, our experience in processing childhood
disability claims has shown that a child's symptoms will generally be
observed by a parent or other caregiver who will provide this information
to the physician and to us.
Although some children may not be able to verbally describe their
symptoms, these symptoms may be expressed in other ways, such as otherwise
unexplained changes in demeanor, behavior, eating habits, and sleeping
habits. These changes would be readily discernible to the child's parents
or other caregivers, a physician or other professionals experienced in
evaluating and treating children, as well as to other people who see the
children, such as relatives, teachers, social workers, and ministers.
Older children should be more able to express their symptoms and any
adverse effects of treatment, if this information is needed for
adjudication.
Adolescents
Comment: Many commenters requested
that we eliminate the proposed criteria that distinguished between
children under age 13 and over age 13. Many of the commenters questioned
our statements in the ninth paragraph of proposed 114.00C that the course
and spectrum of disease in children age 13 and older is generally similar
to that of adults, and that older children with HIV encephalopathy and HIV
wasting syndrome should be evaluated under the appropriate adult listings.
One comment asserted that scientific and medical literature point to
distinctive differences between the course and spectrum of HIV infection
in adolescents and adults, and referred us to the "Journal of
Pediatrics," Volume 119, July 1991, Number 1, Part 2, titled
"Guidelines for the Care of Children and Adolescents with HIV
Infection. Report of the New York State Department of Health AIDS
Institute Criteria Committee for the Care of HIV-Infected
Children."
Response: We partially adopted the
comments. Our statement in the ninth paragraph of proposed 114.00C that
the course and spectrum of the disease in children age 13 and older is the
same as in adults was correct and was confirmed by various pediatric
authorities, including some who specialize in the study and treatment of
adolescents. We disagree with the comment suggesting that the scientific
and medical literature supports a contrary view. Indeed, the article cited
in the comment does not say that there are significant differences between
adolescents and adults in the manifestations of HIV infection; it says
that there are differences in epidemiology—i.e., the modes of
disease transmission. Our disability determination, however, is based on
the effects of the disease on a child's ability to function in an
age-appropriate manner, not on how the child acquired HIV disease.
Nevertheless, in response to the comments we deleted the statement about
the course and spectrum of the disease in adolescents, and revised the
statement (now in final 114.00D5) about the manifestations and course of
disease in younger children. The proposed statement about the disease in
adolescents did not provide guidance that was especially relevant to the
determination of disability and, therefore, was superfluous.
Comment: A number of commenters
thought that it was more difficult for some children with HIV infection to
qualify for disability than it was for children with other impairments.
The commenters gave as an example a child over age 13 with HIV
encephalopathy. The ninth paragraph of 114.00C of the proposed rules had
indicated that such a child should be evaluated under proposed adult
Listing 14.08G (which, in turn, cross-referred to criteria in the eighth
paragraph of 14.00D), and would have required the child to show
progressive motor dysfunction and the absence of a concurrent illness. The
commenters suggested that this proposed listing was more severe than the
children's neurologic Listing 111.06, which the commenters thought
requires only interference with age-appropriate major daily
activities.
Response: We do not agree that any
of the proposed listings made it more difficult for children with HIV
infection to qualify for disability than children with other impairments,
for reasons we have already given in an earlier comment and
response.
The proposed criteria for HIV encephalopathy for children were not more
stringent than Listing 111.06. The criteria in the eighth paragraph of
proposed 14.00D, which would have been applied to children, required only
that there be HIV encephalopathy "characterized by" cognitive or
motor dysfunction that limited function and progressed, and that there not
be a concurrent illness that could otherwise explain the neurological
findings. Thus, the criteria only defined the syndrome of HIV
encephalopathy; that is, how one can tell that a person has HIV
encephalopathy without invasive testing. Childhood Listing 111.06, on the
other hand, requires more than mere interference with age-appropriate
activities; it requires persistent disorganization or deficit of motor
function involving two extremities that, despite prescribed therapy,
interferes with age-appropriate major daily activities and results in
disruption of fine and gross movements or gait and station.
However, as we have already said, we believe that the proposed criteria
for evaluating HIV encephalopathy in children could be simplified because
they appeared only in proposed 114.00C, not in the listing, and required a
cross-reference to an adult listing that itself cross-referred to 14.00D
of the adult rules. Therefore, we revised final Listing 114.08H (which
replaces proposed Listing 114.08J) to include HIV encephalopathy and
criteria specifically for children. We also provided guidance in final
114.00D5 specifically for the evaluation of neurological abnormalities,
such as HIV encephalopathy, in children. We also deleted the requirement
for ruling out other causes, as we did in the corresponding adult
rule.
Comment: Some comments questioned
our proposals in Listings 114.08F and 114.08G to limit the criteria for
multiple bacterial infections and lymphoid interstitial
pneumonia/pulmonary lymphoid hyperplasia to children under age 13.
Similarly, some comments questioned the proposal to pair different
manifestations with functional requirements, for the two age groups in
proposed Listings 114.08L and 114.08M.
Response: We adopted most of the
comments. We eliminated the age reference in final Listing 114.08L,
Lymphoid interstitial pneumonia/pulmonary lymphoid hyperplasia, so that it
now applies to children of all ages. We had proposed the distinction only
because the manifestation is quite rare in older children, as it is in
adults. However, it is possible that an older child could have the
disorder, especially as more and more children who contracted HIV
perinatally or early in life are surviving into adolescence. For reasons
we have already given, however, we have also revised final Listing 114.08L
to better describe listing-level severity.
The functional listing, final Listing 114.08O, which replaces proposed
Listings 114.08L and 114.08M, no longer lists specific medical
manifestations. Therefore, there is no longer a need to distinguish
between adolescents and younger children.
We have retained the age limit in final Listing 114.08A5, Multiple or
recurrent pyogenic bacterial infections, because these types of infections
are more serious and more indicative of a rapid decline in younger
children, and age 13 is medically an appropriate dividing line. Although
we could have confined the rule to younger children, we decided to retain
the rule because age 13 is fair and consistent with prevailing medical
practice, and we want these listings to be as inclusive as possible.
Furthermore, unlike the proposed rules, the final rules include a new
Listing 114.08A6 under which all children, including adolescents, may
establish that they have impairments of listing-level severity as the
result of multiple bacterial infections of any type.
Comment: Another comment recommended
that we address the special needs of adolescents with HIV infection,
including feelings and fears regarding HIV testing, effective ways of
counseling adolescents, coping strategies of adolescents with HIV
infection, and the role of social support in the lives of adolescents with
HIV infection. The comment also recommended that we establish a group of
experts within SSA to focus on the specific needs of adolescents with HIV
infection.
Response: We share these concerns
about the impact of HIV infection on adolescents. However, the
recommendations involve areas of social services policy that are beyond
our authority under the Act and, thus, cannot be addressed within the
context of these rules.
Final 114.08H Neurological Manifestations
Comment: One comment recommended
that we add "the sudden acquisition of new learning
disabilities" as a fourth criterion in proposed Listing 114.08J
(final Listing 114.08H).
Response: We adopted the comment. We
added language to the second paragraph of final 114.00D5 and a
parenthetical statement in final Listing 114.08H1 (which replaces proposed
Listing 114.08J1) to state clearly that the loss of previously acquired,
or marked delay in achieving, developmental milestones or intellectual
ability, includes "the sudden acquisition of a new learning
disability." This addition is only a clarification of our original
intent in the proposed rules.
Final 114.08I Growth Disturbance
Comment: Many commenters suggested
we clarify our criteria for assessing failure to thrive. Some commenters
thought we were using the height criteria specified in Listing 100.02 to
assess failure to thrive under proposed Listing 114.08K. The commenters
indicated that, because the term "failure to thrive" generally
refers to infants and children who fail to gain weight at an appropriate
rate or who lose weight, the listing should contain criteria based on
weight.
Other commenters stated that the 10 percent weight loss required by
proposed Listings 114.08L and 114.08M, which was the same standard used in
the adult HIV listings, was too strict. They pointed out that a standard
of weight loss can make sense for adults because adults are fully grown
and are expected to maintain a static weight. However, because children
are growing, it is possible for a child to be gaining weight but falling
behind what is normal, so that the resulting impairment would be as severe
as a serious weight loss. The majority of these commenters suggested using
a 5 percent weight loss as a standard for children. Another suggestion was
to base our criteria on a failure to follow age-appropriate growth curves
on standard growth charts.
Response: We adopted several of the
comments. We revised final Listing 114.08I, which is now headed
"Growth disturbance" to include weight criteria for failure to
thrive in addition to the height criteria. The first two criteria of final
Listing 114.08I describe children who have either lost weight or who have
failed to gain weight at an appropriate rate, so that there is persistence
of a fall of 15 percentiles on a standard growth chart or persistence of
weight below the third percentile on a standard growth chart. We have
determined that this approach provides a more accurate method of
assessment than basing our criteria solely on a percentage of weight loss
because, as the commenters stated, children can, in fact, be gaining
weight and still be failing to thrive.
We have, however, also retained the criterion of a 10 percent weight loss
in final Listing 114.08I3 (formerly in proposed Listings 114.08L and
114.08M) because in some cases 10 percent weight loss will still be less
than 15 percentiles on a standard growth chart or result in a weight above
the third percentile. We believe that a 5 percent weight loss would be too
small to be a reliable standard in the listings, and that children with
this amount of weight loss will have to be evaluated on an individualized
basis under the rules for equivalence and the last step of the sequential
evaluation process.
We have also retained the rules providing for loss of height or length, as
described in the growth impairment listings in 100.00. Both the 10 percent
weight loss provision and the cross-reference to the growth impairment
listings merely provide alternative criteria by which children may be
found disabled under the listings.
Comment: A number of commenters were
also concerned about assessing HIV-related growth impairments in children
by reference to the criteria of Listing 100.02. The commenters said that
Listing 100.02 defines when a growth impairment is disabling in itself and
not because HIV infection has interfered with growth. The commenters also
questioned whether the longitudinal approach required by Listing 100.02 is
appropriate for children with a progressive disease such as HIV
infection.
Response: Listing 100.02 is
appropriate to use because it is a listing for evaluating growth
impairment caused by a known medically determinable impairment, such as
HIV infection. It is, thus, a very appropriate listing for evaluating
growth impairment caused by HIV infection. (However, we revised the
reference to 100.00ff for consistency with our other revisions.) In any
event, by expanding final Listing 114.08I, we have made the reference to
the growth impairment listing only one alternative among four by which a
child's impairment may meet the listing, not the sole criterion as in the
NPRM.
We believe the longitudinal approach required by the growth impairment
listings is reasonable. Multiple measurements are needed to properly
assess the decline in the child's growth and its persistence.
Final 114.08O1:
The Functional Criteria for Infants
Comment: One comment objected to the
criteria in Listing 112.12, the description of functional deficit we used
to describe listing-level severity for infants from birth to age 1 in
proposed Listing 114.08L3. The comment stated that our standard of
one-half chronological age for these children appeared to be more
restrictive than the standard for older children and adults, especially
considering how quickly infants change over time. Also, the comment
suggested that impairment at the level specified need only be documented
at one assessment.
Response: The functional standard
for children from birth to the attainment of age 1 (and for many children
age 1 to the attainment of age 3), now in final Listing 114.08O, is not
more restrictive than the standard used for older children and adults. In
the Mental Disorders listings, older children and adults are found
disabled at the listing level if their impairments result in marked
limitations in two areas of functioning. In Listings 112.12A and B (and in
Listings 112.02B1 for children age 1 to 3), however, a young child has an
impairment that meets the functional requirements of the listings if he or
she has either one "extreme" limitation or two
"marked" limitations. An extreme limitation may result when the
function or developmental milestone is limited to no more than one-half
the child's chronological age, while marked limitations result with less
severe limitations—more than one-half but no more than two-thirds of
the child's chronological age.
For this reason, we provide two ways for children from birth to the
attainment of age 3 to establish listing-level severity. Under the
functional criteria in Listings 112.02B1a, b, and c, and in Listings
112.12A and B, children can establish that their impairments are of
listing-level severity by showing functioning or delays at no more than
one-half of their chronological age. Alternatively, under Listings
112.02B1d and 112.12E, they can establish listing-level severity in the
same way that older children and adults do: by showing marked
impairment—i.e., functioning at more than one-half but less than
two-thirds of chronological age—in two functional areas.
We recognize the problems involved in assessing infants, who do change
rapidly over time. Because of this, we cannot state that determinations of
disability can always be based on a single evaluation. The amount of
evidence needed for each claim has to be determined based on the facts of
that specific claim, which include the nature and progression of the
impairment, the interventions and treatments available, the response to
those interventions and treatments, and—perhaps most
importantly—the individual infant's own response to the
illness.
Other Comments
Error in Proposed Listing
14.08D
Comment: Several commenters pointed
out that the 2-month timeframe set out in the ninth paragraph of proposed
14.00D for chronic diarrhea or documented fever caused by HIV wasting
syndrome was longer than the 1 month required by the CDC's surveillance
definition.
Response: The criterion in the NPRM
was an editorial error. In fact, we have been using a 1-month standard in
our operating instructions, consistent with the CDC surveillance
definition of HIV wasting syndrome. We have corrected the final rule,
which is in final Listing 14.08I.
Administrative Procedure Act
Comment: A few commenters expressed
a concern that we had released guidelines on the evaluation of HIV
infection in the form of a Social Security Ruling (SSR), in effect
implementing the proposed rules in the NPRM in advance of public comments.
Some commenters saw this as a breach of faith or a violation of the
Administrative Procedure Act (APA).
Response: We have issued SSRs
(SSRs
84-19 and 86-20)
and manualized instructions concerning HIV infection on various occasions
since 1983, as medical and scientific knowledge about this disease became
available, to provide guidance to our decisionmakers concerning how claims
involving HIV infection could be evaluated within the context of the law
and regulations. On December 17, 1991, we published the latest of these
instructions, an interpretative ruling,
SSR
91-8p, in the FEDERAL REGISTER (56 FR 65498), to announce and to
state our criteria for evaluating HIV infection. We have been applying
this interpretive ruling in our adjudication of claims filed by of people
with HIV infection. Since January 11, 1990, we have published SSRs in the
FEDERAL REGISTER pursuant to the provisions of § 422.406(b) of part
422, of title 20 of the Code of Federal Regulations. Statements of policy
in SSRs continue to be binding on all components of SSA, just as they have
been since before the regulatory change in 1990 that provided for their
publication in the FEDERAL REGISTER.
The purpose of these criteria has been to permit our decisionmakers to
make findings of disability when a particular AIDS- or HIV-related
condition could "meet" or "equal" a listing under the
existing regulatory framework. If we had not published them but had waited
for these final rules, we would have followed our prior instructions
which, as we have stated, were not as inclusive as the criteria we
published in SSR 91-8p.
The effect would have been only to delay needlessly claims that we have
now been able to allow.
Advisory Council
Comment: A number of commenters
recommended that we convene a group of experts, an advisory council, or
other knowledgeable specialists to evaluate and revise the proposed
listings on HIV infection, and to regularly review the listings to keep
the criteria for HIV-related diseases current. Some commenters also
thought that the proposed rules for evaluating HIV infection in children
did not reflect the expertise of childhood medical specialists. They
pointed out that no childhood specialty groups, such as the American
Academy of Pediatrics (AAP), or public interest advocacy groups were among
the list of medical specialty groups listed in the NPRM as providing
information in developing the HIV criteria in proposed Part B. They
questioned whether any of the experts listed were pediatricians and
whether they were independent of SSA. A few commenters also said the
implementation of the proposed rules should be delayed until we consult
with childhood HIV experts.
Response: We did not adopt the
recommendation to establish an advisory council to assist us in preparing
these rules. We solicited information from individual medical experts,
including pediatricians, in developing the proposed rules. Establishing a
separate group of experts following the publication of the NPRM would
likely have duplicated many of the steps we had already undertaken and,
most importantly, such duplication would have caused unnecessary delay in
the publication of these final rules, to the disadvantage of claimants
with HIV infection. Moreover, the public comments in response to the NPRM
came from a broad spectrum of the medical, legal, and advocacy
communities, and, hence, included some of the kind of input recommended by
the commenters.
Nevertheless, and partly in response to the comments, we have sought
additional information from a wide range of individual medical
specialists. Other experts assisted us on an individual basis as we
finalized these rules and responded to the comments.
With regard to the proposed rules for evaluating HIV infection in
children, although we did not obtain information from the AAP during the
development of the proposed rules, we did obtain information from
pediatricians at Johns Hopkins Hospital, the Centers for Disease Control,
and other Federal agencies, all of which were independent of SSA.
Furthermore, during the process of developing the final rules, we obtained
information from additional pediatricians and other individuals with
knowledge and treatment experience in pediatric HIV infection in all
childhood populations, including adolescents. Among these individuals were
some recommended by members of the AAP and a physician to whom we were
specifically referred by the AAP. Finally, the AAP, as well as other
pediatric specialty groups and other children's advocacy groups, have
submitted comments on the NPRM expressing their interest or concern about
its content and publication. By submitting these comments, these groups
have participated in the formulation of the final rules.
Timely Updates
Comment: A number of commenters
responded to our request for suggestions on alternatives to our regulatory
process consistent with the APA and that would enable us to issue timely
updates to the listings for HIV infection (56 FR at 65704). One comment
suggested that we develop a decisionmaking protocol, which would be
subject to the normal regulatory process, that would establish a procedure
for evaluating when changes would be appropriate in the listings. Other
comments proposed that we create an ongoing advisory panel composed of a
range of experts committed to assisting us in updating and refining these
procedures in a timely fashion as medical knowledge on HIV improves.
Response: We appreciate these
suggestions, and will give them further study. We will study whether any
of the suggestions we received can be used given the constraints of the
Act and our regulations. We have always attempted to update the medical
listings to reflect advancements in medical technology, disability
evaluation and treatment, and changes in knowledge and new disease
processes. We monitor the listings on an ongoing basis to ensure that they
continue to meet program purposes and, when changes are found to be
warranted, the listings for that body system are updated through the
normal regulatory process.
We recognize that the HIV listings may need to be changed as we learn more
about the course of HIV infection in different populations, and as new
tests and treatments are developed. We will update the listings as it
becomes necessary, and will issue new instructions to our adjudicators as
this becomes necessary.
Excessive Paperwork
Comment: A number of commenters were
concerned that the proposed rules were complicated and would require too
much paperwork on the part of health care providers and claimants to
document a claimant's eligibility. They were also concerned that the
proposed rules would not produce timely disability determinations, which
would be harmful to individuals affected by HIV infection.
Response: We agree that paperwork
and the effort required to establish a disabling impairment should be kept
to a minimum. We have made changes in the final listings that will
facilitate the documentation and adjudication of HIV claims. These changes
include revising the criteria for documenting the existence of HIV
infection and its manifestations to permit documentation of HIV infection
or its manifestations in the absence of a definitive diagnosis and to
permit a finding of "meets" for most of the impairments formerly
tied to functional criteria in proposed Listing 14.08M when the medical
evidence indicates listing-level severity. In addition, we give these
claims priority handling.
Training
Comment: Several commenters
expressed the need for extensive training for health care officials,
physicians, advocates, Social Security personnel, and the general
public.
Response: We agree, and have already
begun a public awareness campaign and training initiative with respect to
HIV including the design, printing, and distribution of brochures,
television and radio public service announcements (in both English and
Spanish), and video news releases. We are also working with the medical
community, service providers, and advocacy groups to ensure that the
important message about the potential for Social Security Disability
Insurance (SSDI) and SSI benefits reaches those with HIV infection. We
have also provided training to our adjudicators and will continue to
provide training as necessary.
Trust Fund
Comment: A few commenters expressed
concern about the cost of adding manifestations of HIV infection to the
Listing of Impairments on the Social Security and health care financing
systems.
Response: These final rules
establish a listing for HIV infection to replace the adjudicative criteria
we have been using to evaluate manifestations of this disease. These final
rules represent only the latest refinement of the criteria we have been
using since we began receiving these cases shortly after AIDS was first
identified. Consequently, we do not expect their publication to have a
significant additional effect on the Federal Disability Insurance Trust
Fund or the Federal Hospital Insurance and Federal Supplementary Medical
Insurance Trust Funds. It should also be noted that SSI benefits are not
paid from the Social Security trust funds, but from the general
revenues.
Waiting Period for Cash and Medicare Benefits
Comment: A comment suggested that we
waive the 24-month waiting period to qualify for Medicare for individuals
with HIV infection, which, the comment indicated, we do for other
conditions, such as end-stage renal disease. The comment also noted that
the 5-month waiting period requirement for SSDI benefits is inappropriate
in HIV-infection cases, in view of the short life expectancy that follows
a diagnosis of AIDS.
Response: We certainly empathize
with the need for medical care for people who are HIV-infected. The
comments are, however, outside the scope of these regulations. More
importantly, the waiting periods for Medicare (including the exception for
end-stage renal disease) and for SSDI benefits are specified in the Act,
and cannot be "waived" without a legislative change.
Critical Payments
Comment: One comment recommended
that the regulations require Social Security disability adjudicators to
notify claimants of the availability of immediate critical payments at the
time they are found eligible for disability benefits.
Response: We did not adopt this
comment because it is outside the scope of these regulations and has been
dealt with in our operating instructions. One of our goals is to pay all
benefits due on time, and in the vast majority of cases we meet this goal
through routine processing. However, our operating instructions provide
for expedited payment by various means if a claimant has a financial
emergency. These methods include the one-time emergency advance payment
(EAP) procedure, which can be made in SSI cases in accordance with §
416.520 of our regulations when the individual is presumptively eligible
for SSI payments and has a financial emergency. Our Field Offices and
processing centers also have the capability to make expedited payments in
other critical Social Security and SSI case situations.
Determinations at Steps 4 and 5; Younger Individuals
Comment: A number of commenters
supported the philosophy of awarding as many claimants as possible at the
listing level. They pointed out that most adult claimants with HIV
infection are "younger" individuals (i.e., people under 50 years
old) under our rules in §§ 404.1563(b) and 416.963(b). The
commenters said that, if these individuals are not found to have an
impairment(s) that meets a listing, they would probably be denied at the
last step of the sequential evaluation processes. One comment said that we
almost never do an equivalence analysis. Other comments said that it was
insufficient to rely on the rest of the sequential evaluation process to
adjust for the "inadequacies" of the medical standard.
Response: As we have explained, the
listings do not represent the standard of disability in the Act, but a
higher level of disability, because they are intended only to be a method
by which we can quickly pay claims that clearly would be allowed at later
steps in the sequential evaluation processes. Indeed, the Act does not
require us to have a set of listings at all; the listings are simply a
means by which we can process some claims more timely and
efficiently.
Therefore, the question is not about any "inadequacies" in the
listings, but about whether we will find disabled all individuals who have
disabling impairments. We are committed to ensuring that all individuals
who are disabled because of HIV infection receive timely and correct
determinations under our rules, whether at the listing-level or beyond.
This means that we will provide assessments of equivalence and of residual
functional capacity (or of a child's functioning) to people who do not
have impairments that meet the requirements of any of these listings, and
allow those individuals who are disabled within the meaning of the
Act.
But the fact that the great majority of people disabled with HIV infection
are found to have listing-level impairments also attests to two things:
that HIV infection is a terrible disease and that we have made our listing
criteria broad enough to include most people who are disabled by HIV
infection. We believe that some of the changes in the final
rules—the listings for manifestations that affect women and girls,
the new stand-alone medical criteria and other new medical criteria we
have added, and the improvements to the functional criteria—will
include even more disabled people at the listing level.
Beyond that, we can only say that we are as concerned about people with
HIV infection as the commenters are. It is never acceptable to deny an
individual who is disabled, even more so when the individual has an
illness like HIV infection. Nevertheless, we are bound to follow the
statute, there are many individuals who have HIV infection and are not yet
disabled under the statute, and we have a responsibility to ensure that
only individuals who are disabled receive benefits.