A linear thought process requires priority and sequence, importance and significance, placement both in mind, culture and character. A circular thought process allows for the equality and recognition that the totality of the universe is important to the chain of events, time, history, culture, people, and God. Wars, famine, destruction and loss of faith can be avoided when one sees Man within the framework of circularity. Linear thought has an end; circular thought only begins.
From Zen: The Master and the Pupil
In all phases of life, one must always determine that which precedes another in matters of priority, importance and significance. In philosophy, and specifically Aristotelian Metaphysics, “form” (the “whatness” of a thing) enjoys priority to “matter” (the material which makes up a thing), so in all aspects of life one must always be aware of that which is important, that which is secondary, and so on.
In preparing to file for Federal Disability Retirement benefits under FERS, the “priority” of concerns must always be to attend to the medical condition, the injury, the illness, etc. Thus, the paradigm of what happens in “real life” is often as follows: A Federal or Postal worker who has worked in the Federal sector for many, many years, begins to develop a medical condition, and in the first year of the medical condition, has to use up much of the accrued sick leave, and maybe even all of the accrued annual leave, and perhaps even some LWOP.
For the fortunate Federal or Postal employee, two elements may coalesce and the outcome would be a positive one: the medical condition is “cured” or otherwise becomes stable; the Federal Agency or the Postal Service has supported the employee, and the aberration of exhausting all of the sick leave, annual leave, and going on LWOP was a mere blip on the Federal or Postal employee’s record, and life and career advance uninterrupted.
But the identical hypothetical, in real life, can take on a very different course of events. The medical condition progressively deteriorates the health of the individual; the medical condition becomes “chronic”; sick leave is exhausted faster than it is accrued; the work which the Federal or Postal worker leaves undone because of the lengthy absences is not left as a residue of mere whispers in the hallways of the Federal building; rather, they become a malignancy which expands into open hostility by the Agency.
At some point in the “process” of a deteriorating medical condition, the question is asked: Is it time to file for FERS Disability Retirement benefits? At what point does this question arise? If it is asked too soon, there is the appearance that one is merely trying to “game the system”. If it is asked too late, there is the untenable circumstance that the Federal or Postal employee has done everything to destroy the life and career that one has worked so hard to preserve — exhausting all savings; imprinting the blemish upon one’s reputation of being a conscientious worker; being placed on a Performance Improvement Plan (commonly referred to by its acronym, a “PIP”); straining the carefully fostered relationships developed over many years within the Agency by having others “carry the workload”, etc.
It is often the gray line — the boundary between suffering from a medical condition and attempting to take care of the medical condition; and the recognition that one must survive — financially, emotionally, for the present and the future; and the tension which builds between the two. There is rarely a “right” time to ask about Federal Disability Retirement benefits. At some point, it becomes a natural question. If the Federal Agency “suggests” such a course, it is probably at a later stage than was necessary; if the doctor suggests it, it is at least a time of serious consideration. If the Federal or Postal employee is contemplating it, then certain considerations should always come to the forefront.
When the time comes in the life of a Federal or Postal employee to contemplate filing for FERS Disability Retirement benefits, the conceptual distinction must be made between “having a medical condition” and “proving that a medical condition prevents one from performing one or more of the essential elements of one’s job.” There is thus the “medical aspect” of the life of a Federal or Postal employee, and the “Disability Retirement applicant aspect”. While the two should never directly conflict, the existence of the former does not necessarily guarantee the success of the latter.
This is where priority, importance, and significance come into play.
Priority: One’s health and well-being; taking care to obtain the necessary medical treatment to regain one’s health — these should be the priority in one’s life.
Importance: While one’s health concerns have a priority; this does not mean that collateral needs are unimportant. Importance is not defined by priority in sequence. Rather, there can be multiple issues of relatively equal importance, and the focus upon one does not diminish the importance of another. In a Federal Disability Retirement application, it is critical to begin laying the groundwork in obtaining the necessary medical evidence in order to prove one’s eligibility for Federal Disability Retirement benefits under FERS.
Significance: Keeping in mind that the priority of concern is health and well-being; that importance of other considerations does not detract from the priority of that singular focus upon one’s health; and further, that there are significant evidentiary issues which must be confronted in preparing a Federal Disability Retirement application.
How does all of this translate into the practical sphere, for a Federal or Postal worker, in preparing to file for FERS Disability Retirement benefits? Take, for instance, the issue of medical treatment, and how such medical treatment will impact one’s eligibility in filing for Federal Disability Retirement benefits. If surgery for a medical condition is an option, must one undergo such surgical intervention? How about physical therapy? Medication regimens?
Such questions obviously contain all three of the elements previously discussed — priority (which modality of treatment and to what extent), importance (whether certain medical treatments will be helpful, and what impact will refusal have upon a Federal Disability Retirement application), and significance (can refusal to engage certain modalities of treatment regimens prevent one from being eligible for Federal Disability Retirement benefits) — all coalesce and intersect.
Where does singular focus upon medical treatment end, and considerations of Federal Disability Retirement begin? This is probably a rhetorically irrelevant question, because treatment for one’s medical condition should never “end”, but at some point, there is an intersection between the medical condition, and steps to be taken to document one’s medical condition for purposes of filing Federal Disability Retirement benefits.
When the two issues coalesce, certain legal principles need to be kept in mind. For instance, one should note that an applicant for disability retirement benefits must establish the extent to which her disability can or cannot be “controlled”. Shanoff v. Office of Personnel Management, 103 M.S.P.R. 549 (2006). Furthermore, the Board has repeatedly held that the voluntary refusal to accept facially reasonable treatment, standing alone, will bar entitlement to Federal or Postal Disability Retirement benefits.
The obvious question here, of course, is what is “facially reasonable treatment”? When an employee is unable to render useful and efficient service because the Federal or Postal employee fails or refuses to follow or to accept normal treatment, then it will be found that the disability flows, not from the disease or injury itself, but from one’s voluntary failure or refusal to take the available corrective or ameliorative action. Again, Shanoff, 103 M.S.P.R. 549, (citing Baker v. Office of Personnel Management, 782 F.2d 993, 994 (Fed. Cir. 1986)).
As the 20th Century Philosopher Ludwig Wittgenstein once noted, the mere fact that one may not be able to observe the clear demarcation between light and darkness, does not mean that either don’t exist. Similarly, while the Merit Systems Protection Board may not always explicitly define, for each and every case, what kinds of medical treatments “must” be followed, doesn’t mean that there aren’t certain guidelines to follow. For instance, in Diener v. Office of Personnel Management, 7 M.S.P.R. 551, 555 (1981), the Board found that an estimated probability of success of future surgery is speculative, just as a prediction as to the worsening of a condition may be, and will not necessarily provide a basis for denial of a disability annuity.
On the other hand, it has been found that where an appellant has failed to accept facially reasonable treatment because she did not follow her physician’s recommendations to undergo psychological therapy or to take prescribed anti-depressants, such refusal would be a basis for a Federal Disability Retirement application denial.
Thus, the “spectrum” of what is facially reasonable treatment can be fairly discerned. On the one extreme of the spectrum, is the option of undergoing invasive surgery. On the other end of the spectrum, is the mandate of following a doctor’s medication regimen. Everything else falls in between the two extremes.
Throughout, it is always essential to recognize that obtaining the proper medical treatment has the primacy of priority; that at some point in treating one’s medical condition, a Federal or Postal employee may begin to consider whether to file for FERS Disability Retirement benefits, and the importance of obtaining the proper documentation must be addressed; and finally, the significance of evidentiary issues in preparing a Federal Disability Retirement application must be recognized. Thus, medical treatment is the priority; obtaining the proper medical documentation is of importance; and consideration of evidentiary issues is of significance. Identifying and recognizing the conceptual distinction between the three will hopefully be helpful for all Federal and Postal employees who are considering filing for Federal Disability Retirement benefits.
Sincerely,
Robert R. McGill, Esquire
FERS Disability Retirement Attorney
Robert R. McGill is an attorney who specializes in Federal Disability Retirement, a practice area he dedicates 100% of his time helping Federal and Postal workers secure their disability retirement benefits under both FERS and CSRS. For more information about his legal services, publications and forum, please visit his Federal Disability Retirement website.