Guest guest Posted May 19, 2004 Report Share Posted May 19, 2004 Hi Bernie, I've looked into this a bit and I have to say getting ODSP looks to be a total and complete nightmare especially for those with 'invisible' disorders. I'll post a link for you to check out for yourself. I don't mean to sound disheartening Bernie! I just wanted to share with you what I had found out about whether it's even realistic to expect to get anything at all from ODSP. I think perhaps the best avenue is to look for types of careers your dtr. could do at home on her own terms. That's what I've found to be the most feasible for me right now. Anyway, below is a link to the full critical analysis of the program and is disheartening to say the least. I've pasted some quotations that I took from the articles below the link. http://dawn.thot.net/denial_by_design.html MAKING THE DIAGNOSIS: ....... " The DAU has also tended to hold to its own conservative views about less understood medical conditions such as fibromyalgia, chronic pain syndrome, and environmental sensitivity, to name a few. While there is apparently no official policy of refusing to recognize these disorders, advocates have found that the DAU rarely grants ODSP benefits in these cases. In fact, as recently as 2001, the DAU has held the position that fibromyalgia could not be considered a substantial impairment because " this debatable condition is benign, non-deforming and [does not progress] into total disability. " " CHERRY PICKING " EVIDENCE: Particularly disturbing is the tendency of DAU adjudicators to selectively highlight evidence, seizing on those parts of the DDP and medical reports that suggest that the applicant is not substantially impaired, while ignoring the parts that suggest otherwise. In its appeal decisions, the SBT has expressed concern over this apparent " cherry-picking " of evidence. The quotation presented above as an example of the DAU discounting evidence and opinions provided by an applicant's doctor can also be seen as an illustration of this selectivity. In one case, an applicant's doctor had written, " I do not have any other therapies to offer him, but hopefully in the next year or so, there will be alternative treatments available. " In deciding that the applicant was not disabled, the DAU chose to quote, " …in the next year or so, there will be alternative treatments available. " FAILING TO PROVIDE FEEDBACK ON THE DDP: Even if an ODSP applicant can get beyond the DAU's medical " opinions " and fondness for cherry-picking evidence, the adjudication process involves numerous additional obstacles. One of the most substantial is the persistent failure of the DAU to provide feedback on the completeness of an applicant's DDP or request additional information if it is necessary. Although the regulations associated with the ODSPA require the DAU to seek additional disability information where necessary, the DAU takes the view that it is the applicant's obligation to provide what is needed. Only in cases where something is " staring them in the face " will the DAU request the information. 36 Many advocates would argue, and indeed many appeal decisions would suggest, that even where it is glaringly obvious, the DAU will not necessarily request the additional information. Rather than contact the applicant's doctor or a specialist when a critical piece of information is missing, the DAU will, more often than not, merely reject the application. ACCOUNTABILITY: For the almost 11,000 people held ineligible for ODSP benefits by the DAU in 2000 / 2001, accountability and transparency are major concerns. At a recent forum on the Ontario Disability Support Program held in Ottawa, participants questioned why, for example, was a person with Multiple Sclerosis and deemed 73% disabled denied benefits? Why was a person deemed 81% disabled denied? 41 The Province has designed an adjudication process that is impenetrable, denying applicants and the public the " checks and balances " that should be expected of any government program. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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