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Statement of Principles concerning personality disorder No. 70 of 2008

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Statement of Principles
concerning
 
PERSONALITY DISORDER
No. 70 of 2008
 
for the purposes of the
 
Veterans’ Entitlements Act 1986
and
Military Rehabilitation and Compensation Act 2004
           
Title
1.         This Instrument may be cited as Statement of Principles concerning personality disorder No. 70 of 2008.
 
Determination
2.         The Repatriation Medical Authority under subsection 196B(2) and (8) of the Veterans’ Entitlements Act 1986 (the VEA):
(a)       revokes Instrument No. 143 of 1995, as amended by Instrument No. 13 of 1997, concerning personality disorder; and
(b)       determines in their place this Statement of Principles.
 
Kind of injury, disease or death
3.         (a)        This Statement of Principles is about personality disorder and death from personality disorder.
(b)              For the purposes of this Statement of Principles, "personality disorder" means a psychiatric condition meeting the following criteria derived from DSM-IV-TR:
A.                 An enduring pattern of inner experience and behaviour that deviates markedly from the expectations of the individual's culture. This pattern is manifested in two (or more) of the following areas:
1.                   cognition (i.e., ways of perceiving and interpreting self, other people, and events);
2.                   affectivity (i.e., the range, intensity, lability, and appropriateness of emotional response);
3.                   interpersonal functioning; or
4.                   impulse control.
B.                 The enduring pattern is inflexible and pervasive across a broad range of personal and social situations.
C.                 The enduring pattern leads to clinically significant distress or impairment in social, occupational, or other important areas of functioning.
D.                 The pattern is stable and of long duration, and its onset can be traced back at least to adolescence or early adulthood.
E.                  The enduring pattern is not better accounted for as a manifestation or consequence of another mental disorder.
F.                  The enduring pattern is not due to the direct physiological effects of a substance (e.g., a drug of abuse, a medication) or a general medical condition (e.g., head trauma).
(c)              Personality disorder attracts ICD-10-AM code:
(i)                  F60.0 (paranoid personality disorder);
(ii)                 F60.1 (schizoid personality disorder);
(iii)               F21 (schizotypal personality disorder);
(iv)               F60.2 (antisocial personality disorder);
(v)                F60.31 (borderline personality disorder);
(vi)               F60.4 (histrionic personality disorder);
(vii)             F60.8 (narcissistic personality disorder);
(viii)            F60.6 (avoidant personality disorder);
(ix)               F60.7 (dependent personality disorder);
(x)                F60.5 (obsessive-compulsive personality disorder); or
(xi)               F60.9 (personality disorder not otherwise specified).
(d)              In the application of this Statement of Principles, the definition of "personality disorder" is that given at paragraph 3(b) above.
 
Basis for determining the factors
4.         The Repatriation Medical Authority is of the view that there is sound medical-scientific evidence that indicates that personality disorder and death from personality disorder can be related to relevant service rendered by veterans, members of Peacekeeping Forces, or members of the Forces under the VEA, or members under the Military Rehabilitation and Compensation Act 2004 (the MRCA).
 
Factors that must be related to service
5.         Subject to clause 7, at least one of the factors set out in clause 6 must be related to the relevant service rendered by the person.
 
Factors
6.         The factor that must as a minimum exist before it can be said that a reasonable hypothesis has been raised connecting personality disorder or death from personality disorder with the circumstances of a person’s relevant service is:
 
(a)               experiencing a category 1A stressor within the two years before the clinical onset of personality disorder; or
 
(b)              experiencing a category 1B stressor within the one year before the clinical onset of personality disorder; or
 
(c)              having experienced severe childhood abuse within the ten years before the clinical onset of personality disorder; or
 
(d)              having a clinically significant psychiatric condition as specified, within the five years before the clinical onset of personality disorder; or
 
(e)              experiencing a category 1A stressor within the two years  before the clinical worsening of personality disorder; or
 
(f)               experiencing a category 1B stressor within the one year before the clinical worsening of personality disorder; or
 
(g)              having experienced severe childhood abuse within the ten years before the clinical worsening of personality disorder; or
 
(h)              having a clinically significant psychiatric condition as specified, within the five years before the clinical worsening of personality disorder; or
 
(i)                inability to obtain appropriate clinical management for personality disorder.
 
Factors that apply only to material contribution or aggravation
7.         Paragraphs 6(e) to 6(i) apply only to material contribution to, or aggravation of, personality disorder where the person’s personality disorder was suffered or contracted before or during (but not arising out of) the person’s relevant service.
 
Inclusion of Statements of Principles
8.         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 as in force from time to time.
 
Other definitions
9.         For the purposes of this Statement of Principles:
 
"a category 1A stressor" means one or more of the following severe traumatic events:
(a)              experiencing a life-threatening event;
(b)              being subject to a serious physical attack or assault including rape and sexual molestation; or
(c)              being threatened with a weapon, being held captive, being kidnapped, or being tortured;
 
"a category 1B stressor" means one of the following severe traumatic events:
(a)               being an eyewitness to a person being killed or critically injured;
(b)              viewing corpses or critically injured casualties as an eyewitness;
(c)              being an eyewitness to atrocities inflicted on another person or persons;
(d)              killing or maiming a person; or
(e)              being an eyewitness to or participating in, the clearance of critically injured casualties;
 
"a clinically significant psychiatric condition as specified" means any of the Axis I mood disorders, anxiety spectrum disorders, substance dependence or substance abuse disorders, or attention-deficit and disruptive behaviour disorders of mental health that attract a diagnosis under DSM-IV-TR and is sufficient to warrant ongoing management.  The ongoing management may involve regular visits (for example, at least monthly), to a psychiatrist, clinical psychologist or general practitioner;
 
"an eyewitness" means a person who observes an incident first hand and can give direct evidence of it.  This excludes a person exposed only to media coverage of the incident;
 
"death from personality disorder" in relation to a person includes death from a terminal event or condition that was contributed to by the person’s personality disorder;
 
"DSM-IV-TR" means the American Psychiatric Association: Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fourth Edition, Text Revision.  Washington, DC, American Psychiatric Association, 2000;
 
"ICD-10-AM code" means a number assigned to a particular kind of injury or disease in The International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems, 10th Revision, Australian Modification (ICD-10-AM), Sixth Edition, effective date of 1 July 2008, copyrighted by the National Centre for Classification in Health, Sydney, NSW, and having ISBN 978 1 74210 016 6;
 
"relevant service" means:
(a)       operational service under the VEA;
(b)       peacekeeping service under the VEA;
(c)              hazardous service under the VEA;
(d)              warlike service under the MRCA; or
(e)              non-warlike service under the MRCA;
 
"severe childhood abuse" means:
(a)              the deliberate infliction of physical, emotional, psychological or sexual harm on a child under the age of 16 years by an adult, including parents, care providers, or people who work with or around that child; or
(b)              neglect of a child under the age of 16 years, where there is a failure by an adult, including parents, care providers, or people who work with or around that child, to provide conditions which are essential for the health, physical and emotional development, or wellbeing of that child.
This abuse must be serious enough to warrant ongoing intervention by a child protection agency; or ongoing medical or psychological management;
 
"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
10.       This Instrument applies to all matters to which section 120A of the VEA or section 338 of the MRCA applies.
 
Date of effect
11.       This Instrument takes effect from 5 November 2008.
 
Dated this       twenty-second day of              October          2008
 
 
The Common Seal of the                  )
Repatriation Medical Authority       )
was affixed to this instrument          )
in the presence of:                            )
 
KEN DONALD
CHAIRPERSON