FSMSSA
Conducts Disability Conference
On August 26, 2009, the FSM Social Security Administration
conducted a disability workshop in Chuuk. The workshop took place at High
Tide Hotel at two o’clock in the afternoon. Joining the conference
with the FSMSS Administrator Alexander R. Narruhn and his staff was the
disability examiner for the FSMSSA, John Vanderburgh.
Opening the workshop, Administrator Alexander R. Narruhn welcomed the
participants which included the Deputy Director of the Chuuk State Department
of Health Abraham Ichin, doctors from the Chuuk State Hospital and representatives
from Micronesian Legal Services Corporation.
He said that the FSMSSA had organized the workshop to “facilitate
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establish dialogue between the
FSMSSA and the various organizations and entities that dealt with disability…
to foster a more streamlined and comprehensive environment for prospective
disability applicants”.
A presentation on disability benefits and the requirements placed upon
applicants was done by the Claim Officer Francky Ilai which was followed
by a Q & A session.
Among the issues that were raised, interest and confusion in equal measures
were directed at the definition of disability. The definition of disability
according to Title 53 of the FSM Code is “the inability to engage
in any substantial gainful employment by reason of any medically determinable
physical or mental impairment which can be expected to result in death
or which has lasted or can be expected to last for a continuous period
of not less than 12 months”.
The Administrator explained that the FSM and in extension, the FSMSSA,
did not have a definition for “substantial gainful employment”.
The FSMSSA viewed substantial gainful employment as any work that nets
an individual wages, be it as a lawyer or as a domestic worker.
One other major issue raised concerned the problem of doctors doing examinations
for individuals who were not residing on Weno, the main island. The gathered
doctors asked the FSMSSA to facilitate a means of covering expenses incurred
such as fuel when doctors visited the islands to conduct examinations
specifically for disability claimants. They claimed that all such expenses
were being taken care of by themselves since the state did not offer reimbursement
for such tasks. The administrator conceded that it was a valid concern
and one that the FSMSSA would certainly look into.
The workshop was an unprecedented one and the administrator expressed
hopes of conducting one in each of the other states to better equip the
health care system of the nation in dealing with disability claimants.
Posted on 01/14/2010.
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