Case Vignette
Scarring And Other Things
Patients suffering personal injuries sometimes sustain lacerations resulting in scars. Others require operative intervention which also results in some scarring. Scars will vary in their severity, extent and cosmetic importance.
Chapter 8 in the AMA 5 Guides deals specifically with scarring and the principles of assessment of scars. Table 8-2 on page 178 is instructive. Five classes of scarring can be quantified. At the minor end, Class I yields a loss of between 0 and 9% of whole person function. At the other end of the extreme, Class V yields a loss of between 85% and 95% of whole person function.
Most patients sustaining scars as a result of either lacerations or surgical intervention will be within Class I. A loss of between 0 and 9% of whole person function can therefore be added to their previously combined losses for the purposes of quantifying general damages.
It is also possible that the scars may be of such cosmetic importance that plastic surgical revision is indicated. Additional costs will be involved and these should also be quantified prior to settlement of the claim.
WorkCover Queensland has its own GEPI II assessment methodology. The TEMSKI Guide allows the expert to quantify a loss from scarring.