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UK Social Security and Child Support Commissioners' Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> UK Social Security and Child Support Commissioners' Decisions >> [2002] UKSSCSC CI_4874_2001 (09 August 2002) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKSSCSC/2002/CI_4874_2001.html Cite as: [2002] UKSSCSC CI_4874_2001 |
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[2002] UKSSCSC CI_4874_2001 (09 August 2002)
File no: CI/4874/2001
Decision
Background
"Other symptoms in the hands. The fingers lose colour during these attack (sic) and they seem paler usually in the tips down to the first joints."
Dr Nour determined that there was no evidence that the appellant had suffered from Vibration White Finger at any time since 5th July 1948 and offered the diagnosis, "Atypical white changes of fingers." The doctor added, "The mode of onset of symptoms and their symmetry are not typical of Vibration White Finger."
The appeal to the tribunal
"Starts with pins and needles and hot and cold, whole length of 1st 3 fingers and tingling at the base of little finger. Start to go greyish white at bottom to whole length of finger. Tries to move hands and get them moving. Tingling all the time. Starts to go away the same way. All finger at the same time. Hands seem weak ½ - ¾ hr. afterwards. Problem picking small things up. Nothing really brings attacks on unless in a cold area. Still using vibrating tools but not for long. Holds a straight glass of cold beer would not be a problem. 1-2 times a week it wakes him up. Vibration brings it up. Warmer he is less attacks. Beginning late 80's slight numbness and tingling has got worse and worse. Lack of grip. Calls 1st joint the knuckles of the fist. Early 90's losing colour. No injuries as a miner. Broken arms as a child. Codefen for back pain but no longer."
"He has attacks of pins and needles and his hands feel hot and cold when the 1st. three fingers and base of the little fingers of both hands are affected. The same fingers start to go a greyish white from the base knuckles to the tips affecting the whole length of the fingers."
Later, the statement continued: -
"The description of blanching from the base of the fingers to the tips is inconsistent with a diagnosis of PDA 11 since the peripheral blood vessels at the tips of the fingers are affected first in Vibration White Finger not the bases of the fingers. There would not be blanching of the bases of the fingers before the tips in VWF."
The appeal to the Commissioner
"The ground of appeal is arguable. There is perhaps, an ambiguity. Were the tribunal saying that it was necessary, as a matter of law, that blanching starts at the tips or were they saying that blanching always does start at the tips so that they simply did not believe the claimant's account and were not prepared to accept that he had any, or sufficient, blanching at all."
"In the present case I have received advice from one of the Department's Senior Medical advisors that the blood vessels and nerves nearer the tips of the fingers are smaller and more delicate and hence more prone to vibration damage. It is for this reason that vibration damage tends to occur at the tips of the fingers in the early stages, progressing, over time, down the finger with continued exposure to vibration. The blanching tends to affect the backs as well as the fronts of the fingers (this is unlike the situation when one presses on the fingers and produces a lightening effect due to squeezing the blood from the fingers temporarily.) The question of blanching therefore has to be considered in the context of vibration induced damage and the tribunal were therefore entitled to exercise their clinical judgement as to and whether the symptoms and the blanching described were those of the prescribed disease. In my submission therefore, the tribunal were not necessarily saying they did not believe the claimant's evidence but simply that the claimant's account of blanching did not accord with the accepted medical understanding of vibration induced Raynauld's Phenomenon."
The law
"Industrial injuries benefits shall…be payable in accordance with this section… in respect of any prescribed disease …"
Subsection (2) provides the power of the Secretary of State to prescribe diseases in relation to employed earners. r.2 Social Security (Prescribed Diseases) Regulations 1985 provides that subject to various matters set out therein each disease or injury set out in the first column of Part I of Schedule I thereto is prescribed in relation to all those whose occupations are set out alongside the relevant disease or injury in the second column. In the first column of Schedule I to those regulations at number A11 there appears the following; -
"Episodic blanching, occurring throughout the year, affecting the middle or proximal phalanges, or in the case of a thumb the proximal phalanx, of-
(a) in the case of a person with only 5 fingers (including thumbs) on one hand, any three of those fingers, or
(b) in the case of a person with only 4 such fingers, any 2 of those fingers, or
(c) in the case of a person with less than 4 such fingers or, as the case may be, the one remaining finger (vibration white finger)."
The expression "Vibration induced Raynauld's Phenomenon" does not appear and indeed the expression "Vibration White Finger" only appears in parentheses. Generally speaking, the expressions which appear in the first column of Schedule I are recognised medical conditions whereas A11 refers to symptoms and their degree and frequency of onset. A11 is not alone in this, as the same is true of Prescribed Disease D9. There are three other instances of the addition of expressions in parentheses after the title of the prescribed Disease. They follow the descriptions of A5 A6 and A7.
"The description and diagnosis of vibration white finger is notoriously difficult, as is well illustrated by the series of expert reports on the subject by the Industrial Injuries Advisory Council. Their most recent report (Cm. 2844 published in May 1995) outlines the four previous reports and the problems they discuss. It is well established that Commissioners may look to these reports for assistance in cases of doubt about the law and its application. The most recent report recommended a change to the description and prescription of vibration white finger. Specifically it recommended that the problem should be represcribed as hand-arm vibration syndrome (HAVS). This was not accepted by the Government."
The Commissioner continued by referring to the fact that the Department for Trade and Industry accepted both the vascular and the neurological parts of the disease when considering compensation, the DSS, as it then was, rejected the advice it was given and to continue to accept only the vascular part of the disease when considering entitlement to compensation.
"10. Three issues arise in relation to a claim for disablement benefit in respect of a prescribed disease.
The tribunal's error of law
The representative of the Secretary of State does not support this appeal but I think falls into the same trap as the tribunal did. It is misleading to say that "the question of blanching … has to be considered in the context of vibration induced damage…" The blanching must be considered first, and if the required degree of blanching is established attention should then be turned to causation.
Directions
Stuart McLachlan
Deputy Commissioner
[Signed on original on the date shown] 9.8.02