Revocation and Determination
of
Statement of Principles
Concerning
PANIC DISORDER
ICD-9-CM CODES: 300.01, 300.21
Veterans’ Entitlements Act 1986
1. The
Repatriation Medical Authority under subsection 196B(3) of the Veterans’
Entitlements Act 1986 (the Act):
(a) revokes Instrument No.32 of 1998; and
(b) determines in its place the following
Statement of Principles.
Kind of injury, disease
or death
2. (a) This
Statement of Principles is about panic disorder and
death from panic disorder.
(b) For the purposes of this Statement of
Principles, “panic disorder”, means a psychiatric condition
characterised by the following diagnostic criteria:
(A) the
person has experienced both:
(1) recurrent
unexpected panic attacks; and
(2) (i) has experienced at least four
panic attacks in four weeks, or
(ii) in the case of fewer panic attacks, at
least one of the panic attacks has been followed by 30 days (or more) of one
(or more) of the following:
(a) persistent concern about having additional
panic attacks; or
(b) worry about the implications of the panic
attack or its consequences; or
(c) a significant change in behaviour related to
the panic attacks; where
(B) the panic attacks can occur in the presence
or absence of agoraphobia; and
(C) the panic attacks are not due to the direct
physiological effects of a substance or a general medical condition; and
(D) the panic attacks are not better accounted
for by another mental disorder, such as social phobia, specific phobia,
obsessive-compulsive disorder, post traumatic stress disorder, or separation
anxiety disorder,
attracting
ICD-9-CM code 300.01 or 300.21.
Basis for determining the
factors
3. On
the sound medical-scientific evidence available, the Repatriation Medical
Authority is of the view that it is more probable than not that panic
disorder and death from panic disorder can be related to relevant
service rendered by veterans or members of the Forces.
Factors that must be
related to service
4. Subject
to clause 6, at least one of the factors set out in clause 5 must be related to
any relevant service rendered by the person.
Factors
5. The
factors that must exist before it can be said that, on the balance of
probabilities, panic disorder or death from panic disorder is
connected with the circumstances of a person’s relevant service are:
(a) experiencing a severe stressor within the
two years immediately before the clinical onset of panic disorder; or
(b) experiencing a severe stressor within the
two years immediately before the clinical worsening of panic disorder; or
(c) inability to obtain appropriate clinical
management for panic disorder.
Factors that apply only
to material contribution or aggravation
6. Paragraphs
5(b) to 5(c) apply only to material contribution to, or
aggravation of, panic disorder where the person’s panic disorder was suffered
or contracted before or during (but not arising out of) the person’s relevant
service; paragraph 8(1)(e), 9(1)(e) or 70(5)(d) of the Act refers.
Inclusion of Statements of Principles
7. In this Statement of Principles if a relevant factor applies
and that factor includes an injury or disease in respect of which there is a
Statement of Principles then the factors in that last mentioned Statement of
Principles apply in accordance with the terms of that Statement of Principles.
Other definitions
8. For the purposes of this Statement of
Principles:
“death
from panic disorder” in relation to a person includes death from a terminal
event or condition that was contributed to by the person’s panic disorder;
“DSM-IV”
means the fourth edition of the
American Psychiatric Association’s Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of
Mental Disorders;
“experiencing
a severe stressor” means the person
experienced, witnessed, or was confronted with an event or events that involved
actual or threat of death or serious injury, or a threat to the person’s, or
another person’s, physical integrity.
In the setting of service in the Defence Forces, or
other service where the Veterans’ Entitlements Act applies, events that qualify
as severe stressors include:
(i) threat of serious injury or death; or
(ii) engagement
with the enemy; or
(iii) witnessing casualties or participation in or
observation of casualty clearance, atrocities or abusive violence;
“ICD-9-CM
code” means a number assigned to a
particular kind of injury or disease in the Australian Version of The
International Classification of Diseases, 9th revision, Clinical Modification
(ICD-9-CM), effective date of 1 July 1996, copyrighted by the National Coding
Centre, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Sydney, NSW, and having ISBN
0 642 24447 2;
“panic
attack” means a condition, as defined
in DSM-IV, meeting the following criteria:
the
person has experienced a discrete period of intense fear or discomfort, in
which four (or more) of the following symptoms developed abruptly and reached a
peak within 10 minutes:
(1)
palpitations, pounding heart, or
accelerated heart rate; or
(2)
sweating; or
(3)
trembling or shaking; or
(4)
sensations of shortness of breath
or smothering; or
(5)
feeling of choking; or
(6)
chest pain or discomfort; or
(7)
nausea or abdominal distress; or
(8)
feeling dizzy, unsteady, light
headed or faint; or
(9)
derealisation (feelings of
unreality) or depersonalisation (being detached from oneself); or
(10)
fear of losing control or going
crazy; or
(11)
fear of dying; or
(12)
paresthesias (numbness or tingling
sensations); or
(13)
chills or hot flushes;
“relevant service” means:
(a) eligible war service (other than operational
service); or
(b) defence service (other than hazardous
service);
“terminal
event” means the proximate or
ultimate cause of death and includes:
a) pneumonia;
b) respiratory
failure;
c) cardiac
arrest;
d) circulatory
failure; or
e) cessation of brain function.
Application
9. This
Instrument applies to all matters to which section 120B of the Act applies.
Notes to Statement of Principles concerning panic
disorder (Instrument No. 10 of 1999)
The Statement of Principles concerning panic disorder
(Instrument No. 10 of 1999) in force under section 196B(3) of the Veterans’
Entitlements Act 1986, as shown in this compilation is amended as indicated
in the Tables below.
Table
of Instruments
|
Title
|
Date of notification
in Gazette or FRLI registration
|
Date of
commencement
|
Application, saving or
transitional provisions
|
|
Statement
of Principles concerning panic disorder (Instrument No. 10 of 1999)
|
27 January 1999
(see Gazette 1999, No. GN4)
|
27 January 1999
|
|
|
Amendment
of Statement of Principles concerning panic disorder (Instrument No. 59 of
1999)
|
30 June 1999
(see Gazette 1999, No. GN26)
|
30 June 1999
|
|
Table of Amendments
|
ad. = added or inserted am. = amended
rep. = repealed rs. = repealed and substituted
|
|
Provision affected
|
How affected
|
|
Clause 8– ‘experiencing a severe stressor’...............
|
rs. Instrument No. 59 of 1999
|