The purpose of this rule is to ensure that applications for compensation for permanent total disability are processed and adjudicated in a fair and timely manner. This rule applies to the adjudication of all applications for compensation for permanent total disability filed on or after the effective date of this rule.
The following definitions shall apply to the adjudication of all applications for compensation for permanent total disability:
The purpose of permanent total disability benefits is to compensate an injured worker for impairment of earning capacity.
The term "permanent" as applied to disability under the workers' compensation law does not mean that such disability must necessarily continue for the life of the injured worker but that it will, within reasonable probability, continue for an indefinite period of time without any present indication of recovery therefrom.
The following procedures shall apply to applications for compensation for permanent total disability that are filed on or after the effective date of this rule.
Notice of a pre-hearing conference is to be provided to the parties and their representatives no less than fourteen days prior to the pre-hearing conference. The pre-hearing conference may be by telephone conference call, or in-person at the discretion of the hearing administrator and is to be conducted by a hearing administrator.
The failure of a party to request a pre-hearing conference or to raise an issue at a pre-hearing conference held under paragraph (C)(8) of this rule, does not act to waive any assertion, argument, or defense that may be raised at a hearing held under paragraphs (D) and (E) of this rule.
The following guidelines shall be followed by the adjudicator in the sequential evaluation of applications for compensation for permanent total disability :
Should an objection be filed from a tentative order, a hearing shall be scheduled. (Reference paragraph (E) of this rule).
The non-medical factors that are to be reviewed are the injured worker's age, education, work record, and all other factors, such as physical, psychological, and sociological, that are contained within the record that might be important to the determination as to whether the injured worker may return to the job market by using past employment skills or those skills which may be reasonably developed. (Vocational factors are defined in paragraph (B) of this rule).
Division (C) of section 4123.58 of the Revised Code provides that the loss or loss of use of both hands or both arms, or both feet or both legs, or both eyes, or any two thereof, constitutes total and permanent disability.
Ohio Admin. Code 4121-3-34
Five Year Review (FYR) Dates: 11/16/2020 and 02/01/2026
Promulgated Under: 119.03
Statutory Authority: 4121.30, 4121.32
Rule Amplifies: 4121.35, 4121.36, 4123.58
Prior Effective Dates: 06/01/1995, 09/15/1995, 01/01/1997, 04/01/2004, 06/01/2008, 06/20/2013, 12/15/2014, 02/11/2017