Medicolegal Glossary

Plain-English definitions of impairment, workers’ compensation, and AMA Guides terminology used throughout Impairment.com. Select any term below for its full definition.

A

  • Activities of Daily Living Everyday self-care tasks like dressing, bathing, and eating used to gauge how much an impairment affects daily life.
  • Adjuster The insurance professional who manages and decides a workers' comp claim.
  • Aggravation A work event that worsens a pre-existing condition, often permanently.
  • Agreed Medical Evaluator A physician both sides agree should evaluate a disputed workers' comp claim.
  • AMA Guides The standard reference physicians use to convert injuries into impairment percentages.
  • Ankylosis Stiffening or fusion of a joint that eliminates normal movement.
  • Apportionment Dividing an impairment rating between the current injury and any pre-existing or unrelated causes.
  • Arising Out of Employment A legal test for whether a work activity caused the injury.
  • Atrophy Wasting or shrinkage of muscle, often from disuse or nerve injury.
  • Average Weekly Wage The pre-injury earnings figure used to calculate benefit amounts.

C

  • Carpal Tunnel Syndrome Compression of the median nerve at the wrist causing hand numbness and weakness.
  • Causation Whether, and how much, a specific incident or exposure actually caused the medical condition being rated.
  • Certified Impairment Rater A clinician credentialed to perform impairment ratings to a recognized professional standard.
  • Class of Impairment A severity band in the 6th Edition method that sets the baseline rating range.
  • Combined Values Chart An AMA Guides table for merging two or more impairment percentages so the total never exceeds 100%.
  • Compensability Whether an injury legally qualifies for workers' compensation benefits.
  • Contracture A permanent tightening of muscle, tendon, or scar tissue that limits movement.
  • Course of Employment A legal test for whether an injury happened while the worker was doing their job.
  • Crepitus A grinding or crackling sensation in a joint during movement.
  • Cumulative Trauma Injury that develops gradually from repeated stress rather than a single event.

D

  • Decedent A person who has died, in the context of a death benefit claim.
  • Dependent A family member entitled to benefits after a worker's work-related death.
  • Diplopia Double vision.
  • Disability A reduction in a person's ability to meet personal, social, or work demands because of an impairment.
  • DRE Method A spinal rating method that places an injury into a category based on diagnosis and objective findings.

E

  • Exacerbation A temporary flare-up of a pre-existing condition that returns to baseline.

F

G

  • Grade Modifier A factor that fine-tunes a rating up or down within its severity class in the 6th Edition.
  • Grip Strength A measure of hand strength sometimes used in upper-extremity ratings.
  • Guarding Protective muscle tightening that limits painful movement.

I

L

M

N

  • Neuropathy Damage or dysfunction of one or more nerves, often causing numbness or weakness.
  • Nystagmus Involuntary, repetitive eye movement that can affect vision.

O

  • Objective Findings Measurable, observable medical evidence such as imaging results or reflex changes.

P

Q

R

  • Radiculopathy Nerve-root irritation causing pain, numbness, or weakness along the nerve's path.
  • Range of Motion Method A spinal rating method that measures lost joint or spinal movement compared to normal.
  • Return to Work The process of an injured worker resuming employment, sometimes with modified duties.

S

  • Scheduled Injury An injury to a body part with a benefit amount fixed by statute.
  • Second Injury Fund A fund that helps cover added disability when a new injury combines with a prior one.
  • Sedentary Work A physical demand level involving mostly sitting and minimal lifting.
  • Sequela A lasting condition that results from an earlier injury or illness.
  • Settlement An agreement resolving a claim, often as a lump sum, in place of ongoing benefits.
  • Spasm An involuntary muscle contraction, often a sign of injury.
  • Subjective Findings Symptoms reported by the patient that cannot be directly measured, such as pain.
  • Subrogation An insurer's right to recover paid benefits from a responsible third party.

T

U

V

W

  • Whole Person Impairment A percentage estimating how much a permanent injury affects the body as a whole, not just the injured part.
  • Work Restrictions Medically ordered limits on what tasks a worker may do, such as lifting limits.
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