Last Updated on October 25, 2011 by FERS Disability Attorney
Complexities abound in every field, and the solution to preventing one from become embroiled in such confounding complexities is to divide the complexities into manageable entities. While any bifurcation may be arbitrary, it does not mean that there is not a reasonable basis for such arbitrary division of issues.
Thus, in preparing, formulating and filing a Federal Disability Retirement application under FERS or CSRS, it is important to identify the primary medical issues which are impacting one’s ability/inability to perform one or more of the essential elements of one’s life. It is often queried as to “which one” of the multiple medical conditions should be included in preparing the Applicant’s Statement of Disability (Standard Form 3112A), and further, what are the “primary essential elements” which should be described.
Both questions pose a complexity beyond an ability to answer such a question in a generic fashion, precisely because each case is unique. As to the former question, it all depends upon the impact of the latter question; and as to the latter question, it all depends upon the answer to the former question.
This circularity of interdependence, of which of the major medical conditions one should include, depending upon the type of essential elements of one’s job, is the complexity which must be unraveled, and it is in the process of this unraveling that one then begins to formulate the “bridge” or the “nexus” between the type, extent and severity of one’s medical condition (or its variance of pluralities of conditions) and the multi-tasking nature of the essential elements of one’s positional duties.
It is a complex process, but one in which the various components begin to provide for a foundation of that bridge, which must be constructed carefully, with scrutiny, and with deliberate reasoning.
Sincerely,
Robert R. McGill, Esquire
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