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Progression of Disability Benefits: A Perspective on Multiple Sclerosis
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Article Summary:
This article is a follow up to a larger study that looked at the Progression of Disability Benefits (PODB) for individuals with disability as a whole. This article takes a closer look at the PODB specifically for individuals with Multiple Sclerosis (MS). PODB is defined as "the migration of workers with work-limiting disabilities [such as MS] as they move through a system of economic disability benefits resulting in their ultimate placement into the Social Security Disability system" (Fraser, McMahon, & Danczyk-Hawley, 2003).
Multiple Sclerosis (MS) is a "central nervous system disorder of slow and uneven progression" (Fraser, McMahon, & Danczyk-Hawley, 2003). Research has shown that the onset of MS generally strikes in the mid-thirties or early forties for most individuals with MS and that primarily well educated women are impacted by this disorder.
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First, this study looks at the PODB for individuals with MS in relation to individuals form the general disability population with any other type of disability.
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Next, the study examines if variables such as "age, gender, and type of employer" affects the PODB of employees with MS differently than employees from the general disability population.
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Finally, this study compares the POBD for individuals with MS to that of another chronic neurological disease, epilepsy.
Reference:
Fraser, R.T., McMahon, B., Danczyk-Hawley, C. (2003). Progression of Disability Benefits: A Perspective on Multiple Sclerosis. Journal of Vocational Rehabilitation. 19, 173-179.
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