The Classification of Human Injury Disability Degree 4.1
Should be based on the consequences of the treatment of the injury or the outcome of the objective evaluation of the degree of tissue and organ loss and/or dysfunction, the scientific analysis of the cause and effect relationship between the injury and the disability, and the appraisal of the factual and realistic.
If the injured person meets the level of disability in more than two places, the appraisal opinion should state the level of disability in each place.
4.4
This standard will be the degree of disability of human injury is divided into 10 levels, from the first level (human body disability rate of 100%) to the tenth level (human body disability rate of 10%), each level of disability rate difference of 10%.
4.5
A comprehensive determination of the degree of disability is made on the basis of the destruction of the structure of the human body's tissues and organs, its functional impairment and its degree of dependence on medical treatment and nursing care, with due consideration given to the impact of social interaction and psychological factors caused by the disability.
Labor Capacity Assessment of Work Injury and Occupational Disease Disability Grade
4.1.2
Organ damage is the direct consequence of work injury, but occupational diseases do not necessarily have organ defects.
4.1.3
The degree of dysfunction after a work injury is related to the location and severity of the organ defect, and organ dysfunction due to occupational diseases is related to the severity of the disease. The determination of functional impairment shall be based on the results of the medical examination conducted at the time of the technical appraisal for assessing the level of disability, and shall be determined on a case-by-case basis in accordance with the object of the disability assessment.
4.1.4
Medical Dependency Determination Grading:
a) Special Medical Dependency refers to the necessity of lifelong treatment with special medication, special medical equipment or devices after a work-related disability;
b) General Medical Dependency refers to the necessity of long-term or lifelong medication after a work-related disability.
4.1.5
The scope of self-care mainly includes the following five items:
a) Eating: completely unable to eat on one's own, and needing to rely on the help of others;
b) Turning over: unable to turn over on one's own;
c) Urination: unable to move on one's own, and needing to rely on the help of others for urination and defecation;
d) Dressing and washing up: Unable to dress and wash by herself, totally dependent on others for help;
e) Autonomous movement: unable to walk around on her own.
There are three levels of nursing dependence:
a) total self-care disorder: completely unable to take care of oneself, and all five of the above items need nursing care;
b) most of the self-care disorder: mostly unable to take care of oneself, and needing nursing care for three or four of the five of the above items;
c) part of the self-care disorder: partially unable to take care of oneself, and needing nursing care for one or two of the above items;
c) partial self-care disorder: partially unable to take care of oneself, and needing nursing care for one or two of the above items. one or two of the above require nursing care.