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CFS Advisory Committee Meets
The CFS Advisory Committee to the Department of Health and
Human Services (DHHS) met on Monday, April 4, 2005, to discuss disability in
CFS, hear reports from federal agencies and receive testimony from members of
the public. Dr. Charles Lapp chaired the meeting in the absence of committee
chairman Dr. David Bell, who was unable to attend due to a death in the family.
Dr. Lapp introduced the committee’s new executive secretary, Dr. Howard Zucker.
He replaces Dr. Larry Fields as deputy assistant secretary for health. Dr.
Zucker, a physician trained in pediatric cardiology and anesthesiology, also
holds a law degree. In addressing the committee Dr. Zucker stated that there is
no one who doesn’t know someone with CFS now, and that he would endeavor to
bring problems to the surface, as well as identify and implement solutions. He
noted that CFS affects all aspects of an individual’s life, and that the illness
takes a great toll on families and society. He promised to shepherd the
committee’s recommendations and to effect positive change.
Dr. Lapp brought to the committee’s attention the need for
nominations of new committee members, as published in the Federal Register. Six
members of the committee have terms that will expire on September 30, 2005.*
Nomination packages must be submitted to Dr. Zucker by April 20, 2005. Details
on how to make nominations are available at
http://www.cfids.org/advocacy/2005/gac_03172005.asp.
This will be the first change in the committee’s membership since it was
constituted in 2002.
Discussion then turned to the central topic of the
meeting—disability in CFS. Dr. Lapp opened with a review of various definitions
used in medical and legal settings to denote changes in “normal” function and
health. In a presentation he titled “Taming of the Screw,” he provided an
overview of the various benefit programs that persons disabled by CFS may have
access to (depending upon employment status and other factors), including
short-term medical leave, workman’s compensation, the Family Medical Leave Act,
short-term disability, long-term disability (LTD), Social Security Disability
Income (SSDI) and Supplemental Security Income (SSI). His review of these
programs and the various problems that CFS patients encounter when trying to
access benefits was followed by attorney and committee member Lyle Lieberman’s
remarks and presentations by two invited guest attorneys experienced in
disability law. Kirk Wagar of Coconut Grove, Florida, limits his law practice to
representing policyholders against insurance carriers. Mac Sasser of Charlotte,
North Carolina, is a nationally recognized expert in disability law as well.
Common themes quickly emerged, focusing on the “delay and
denial” tactics practiced by long-term disability insurers, the interplay
between the determination of SSDI benefits and benefits awarded by private
insurers. Also discussed were the limitations now regularly imposed by LTD
carriers for disability related to “self-reported” conditions such as CFS,
migraine and other pain syndromes, and for psychiatric illnesses. The multitude
of problems resulting from ERISA, a law passed in 1974 that gives insurance
companies broad authority for the administration of employee benefits programs,
were covered as well. Comments highlighted the need for reform of this sweeping
law that stacks the disability deck strongly in the insurer’s favor, although
several committee members recognized that inducing such reform was beyond the
committee’s scope. Potential recommendations centered on the review and updating
of Social Security policy ruling 99-2p that provides guidelines for determining
disability in CFS cases, education of physicians who treat CFS patients and must
understand and document their patients’ impairments, and the education of law
professionals, adjudicators and insurers about CFS. These issues, along with
draft recommendations offered at the September 2004 and January 2005 meetings,
will be revisited at the next meeting to arrive at a set of recommendations for
Secretary of Health Mike Leavitt.
The afternoon session was dedicated to agency updates and a
presentation by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Dr. William
Reeves on research activities related to adolescents with CFS, which was
requested by committee chairman Dr. David Bell at the January 7 meeting. Dr.
Reeves reviewed various surveillance studies conducted by CDC from 1992 on, all
of which found rates of CFS in adolescents that were substantially lower than
adults in the same studies. None of the studies identified children under the
age of 12 who met the case definition. CDC will include adolescents in its
current study of CFS being conducted in three regions of
Georgia and will also enroll adolescent
patients in the pilot registry it will launch in
Georgia
in the
coming months. Dr. Reeves acknowledged that although there appears to be less
risk of CFS in adolescents as compared to adults, there are several things about
the illness in this younger population that have not been well studied. The
short- and long-term impact on kids, whether the core symptoms are the same as
adults or slightly different, risk factors for adolescents, utilization of
health care by younger patients and efficacious treatments for kids all warrant
greater investigation. Dr. Reeves noted that CDC will include samples from
adolescents in its genomics and proteomics studies.
Reporting for the National Institutes of
Health (NIH), Dr. Terry Hoffeld announced the publication of
proceedings from the NIH’s June
2003 conference on neuroimmune mechanisms in CFS
and reported that the number of CFS
grants submitted for the next review cycle was three times that of the
just-completed review. He also stated that the NIH was still working with
various institutes to develop a special Request for Applications with its own
set-aside funds to stimulate research interest in CFS.
Public witnesses providing testimony included Rebecca Artmann,
Beverly Boudros and Mary Schweitzer. They addressed disability issues and
related concerns such as name change and physician education. Before concluding
the session Dr. Lapp suggested the committee meet next on June 27 and September
26, with confirmation of such dates to follow by e-mail. In addition to a review
of proposed recommendations and the Social Security ruling, Dr. Reeves was asked
to report on CDC’s education activities at the next meeting. Dr. Zucker thanked
the committee for its guidance on these important issues and the meeting was
adjourned.
For more information about the CFSAC, please visit
http://www.cfids.org/advocacy/CFSAC.asp.
* Members whose terms expire on September 30, 2005: David
Bell, M.D.; Nancy Butler; Nelson Gantz, M.D.; Charles Lapp, M.D.; Lyle
Lieberman, J.D.; and Roberto Patarca, M.D.
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