VA makes a determination about the severity of your disability based on the evidence you submit as part of your claim, or that VA obtains from your military records. See the Combined Ratings section below for information about how VA calculates disability percentage for multiple disabilities.
Under federal law, the cost-of-living adjustments to VA's compensation and pension rates are the same percentage as for Social Security benefits.
Below you will find the steps VA takes to combine ratings for more than one disability and examples using the Combined Ratings Table to illustrate how combined ratings are calculated. If a Veteran has a 50 percent disability and a 30 percent disability, the combined value will be found to be 65 percent, but the 65 percent must be converted to 70 percent to represent the final degree of disability. Similarly, with a disability of 40 percent, and another disability of 20 percent, the combined value is found to be 52 percent, but the 52 percent must be converted to the nearest degree divisible by 10, which is 50 percent.
If there are three disabilities ratable at 60 percent, 40 percent, and 20 percent, respectively, the combined value for the first two will be found opposite 60 and under 40 and is 76 percent. This 76 will be found in the left column, then the 20 rating in the top row.
The intersection of these two ratings is Veterans Crisis Line: Press 1. Complete Directory. If you are in crisis or having thoughts of suicide, visit VeteransCrisisLine. Attention A T users.
The DRS rating must be reliable, i. The scale is intended to measure accurately general functional changes over the course of recovery. Rappaport et al. Results showed a proportional change in DRS scores based on time elapsed between injury and admission to rehabilitation. A significantly greater improvement was seen in the early admission group. The relative sensitivity of the DRS was addressed by Hall et al.
In a comparison with the Glasgow Outcome Scale Jennett et al. The DRS has been proven reliable and valid, as addressed in more detail in following sections. It can be self-administered or scored through interview with the client or the family member. The ease of scoring and the brevity of the scale are compelling reasons for its popularity. An additional advantage is the ease and brevity with which information can be obtained by phone interview. Although not optimum, DRS ratings can even be obtained by medical record review retrospectively in certain cases.
Another advantage of the DRS is that expertise in the field is not needed to complete it accurately. A limitation of the DRS is its relative insensitivity at the low end of the scale mild TBI and its inability to reflect more subtle but sometimes significant changes in an individual within a specific, limited window of recovery. Please contact Mr. Arshad Ali at Email address protected by JavaScript.
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