Statement of Principles

concerning

 

SUBARACHNOID HAEMORRHAGE

No. 67 of 2010

 

for the purposes of the

 

Veterans’ Entitlements Act 1986

and

Military Rehabilitation and Compensation Act 2004

 

Title

1. This Instrument may be cited as Statement of Principles concerning subarachnoid haemorrhage No. 67 of 2010.

 

Determination

2. The Repatriation Medical Authority under subsection 196B(2) and (8) of the Veterans’ Entitlements Act 1986 (the VEA):

(a) revokes Instrument No. 39 of 2003 concerning subarachnoid haemorrhage; and

(b) determines in its place this Statement of Principles.

 

Kind of injury, disease or death

3. (a) This Statement of Principles is about subarachnoid haemorrhage and death from subarachnoid haemorrhage.

(b)              For the purposes of this Statement of Principles, "subarachnoid haemorrhage" means bleeding into the intracranial subarachnoid space.  This definition excludes the following:

(i) bleeding from a cerebral tumour where the bleeding extends into the subarachnoid space; and

(ii) an intracerebral haemorrhage where the bleeding extends into the subarachnoid space.

(c)               Subarachnoid haemorrhage attracts ICD-10-AM code I60 or S06.6.

(d)              In the application of this Statement of Principles, the definition of "subarachnoid haemorrhage" is that given at paragraph 3(b) above.

 

Basis for determining the factors

4. The Repatriation Medical Authority is of the view that there is sound medical-scientific evidence that indicates that subarachnoid haemorrhage and death from subarachnoid haemorrhage can be related to relevant service rendered by veterans, members of Peacekeeping Forces, or members of the Forces under the VEA, or members under the Military Rehabilitation and Compensation Act 2004 (the MRCA).

 

Factors that must be related to service

5. Subject to clause 7, at least one of the factors set out in clause 6 must be related to the relevant service rendered by the person.

 

Factors

6. The factor that must as a minimum exist before it can be said that a reasonable hypothesis has been raised connecting subarachnoid haemorrhage or death from subarachnoid haemorrhage with the circumstances of a person’s relevant service is:

 

(a)               having hypertension before the clinical onset of subarachnoid haemorrhage; or

 

(b)              for males, consuming an average of at least 150 grams of alcohol per week for a continuous period of at least the six months before the clinical onset of subarachnoid haemorrhage; or

 

(c)               for females, consuming an average of at least 110 grams of alcohol per week for a continuous period of at least the six months before the clinical onset of subarachnoid haemorrhage; or

 

(d)              taking an oral contraceptive pill for a period of at least the three weeks before the clinical onset of subarachnoid  haemorrhage; or

 

(e)               smoking at least one pack-year of cigarettes, or the equivalent thereof in other tobacco products, before the clinical onset of subarachnoid haemorrhage, and where smoking has ceased, the clinical onset has occurred within ten years of cessation; or

 

(f)                undergoing anticoagulant therapy at the time of the clinical onset of subarachnoid haemorrhage; or

 

(g)              undergoing thrombolytic therapy at the time of the clinical onset of subarachnoid haemorrhage; or

 

(h)              taking at least 2100 milligrams of aspirin within a seven day period within the 21 days before the clinical onset of subarachnoid haemorrhage; or

 

(i)                undertaking physical activity of at least six METs within the two hours before the clinical onset of subarachnoid haemorrhage; or

 

(j)                using a drug from the specified list within the 72 hours before the clinical onset of subarachnoid haemorrhage; or

 

(k)              having pregnancy induced hypertension at the time of the clinical onset of subarachnoid haemorrhage; or

 

(l)                having an intracranial dissecting aneurysm at the time of the clinical onset of subarachnoid haemorrhage; or

 

(m)            having intracranial infective vasculitis due to a specified infection, at the time of the clinical onset of subarachnoid haemorrhage; or

 

(n)              having an inflammatory vascular disease affecting the cerebral vessels at the time of the clinical onset of subarachnoid haemorrhage; or

 

(o)              having ceased statin medication within the 30 days before the clinical onset of subarachnoid haemorrhage; or

 

(p)              having an acquired haematological disorder from the specified list at the time of the clinical onset of subarachnoid haemorrhage; or

 

(q)              having cerebral trauma within the 28 days before the clinical onset of subarachnoid haemorrhage; or

 

(r)                inability to obtain appropriate clinical management for subarachnoid haemorrhage.

 

Factors that apply only to material contribution or aggravation

7. Paragraph 6(r) applies only to material contribution to, or aggravation of, subarachnoid haemorrhage where the person’s subarachnoid haemorrhage was suffered or contracted before or during (but not arising out of) the person’s relevant service.

 

Inclusion of Statements of Principles

8. In this Statement of Principles if a relevant factor applies and that factor includes an injury or disease in respect of which there is a Statement of Principles then the factors in that last mentioned Statement of Principles apply in accordance with the terms of that Statement of Principles as in force from time to time.

 

Other definitions

9. For the purposes of this Statement of Principles:

 

"a drug from the specified list" means:

(a)               amphetamine;

(b)               cocaine;

(c)               dextroamphetamine;

(d)               methamphetamine;

(e)               phenylpropanolamine; or

(f)                3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine (ecstasy);

 

"alcohol" is measured by the alcohol consumption calculations utilising the Australian Standard of 10 grams of alcohol per standard alcoholic drink;

 

"an acquired haematological disorder from the specified list " means:

(a)                aplastic anaemia;

(b)               bleeding disorder secondary to snake bite;

(c)                bleeding disorder secondary to Vitamin K deficiency;

(d)               disseminated intravascular coagulation;

(e)                essential thrombocythaemia;

(f)                leukaemia;

(g)               plasma cell dyscrasias;

(h)               post-transfusion purpura;

(i)                 qualitative platelet defects associated with coagulation defect;

(j)                 severe liver disease;

(k)               thrombocytopaenia; or

(l)                 thrombotic thrombocytopaenic purpura;

 

"an inflammatory vascular disease" means:

(a) allergic granulomatous angiitis;

(b) Behcet’s disease;

(c) giant-cell arteritis;

(d) polyarteritis nodosa;

(e) serum sickness;

(f) Sjogren’s syndrome;

(g) systemic lupus erythematosus;

(h) Takayasu’s disease; or

(i) Wegener’s granulomatosis;

 

"anticoagulant therapy" means therapeutic administration of a pharmacological agent which suppresses, delays or nullifies blood coagulation (such as heparin, warfarin or dicumarol), but excludes antiplatelet therapy (such as aspirin, clopidogrel, ticlopidine or monoclonal antibodies and recombinant and chemically synthesised peptides that block platelet adhesion or aggregation);

 

"cerebral trauma" means structural injury or physiological disruption of brain function as a result of external force, manifested by at least one of the following clinical features immediately following the event:

(a)                confusion, disorientation, impaired consciousness, loss of consciousness or dysfunction of memory around the time of injury;

(b)               focal neurological deficits;

(c)                skull fracture;

(d)               seizures; or

(e)                intracranial abnormality, including:

(i) intracranial haemorrhage;

(ii) intracranial haematoma;

(iii) cerebral contusion;

(iv) hydrocephaly; and

(v) diffuse axonal injury.

In this definition, external force includes blunt trauma; acceleration or deceleration forces; blast force; or a foreign body penetrating the brain;

 

"death from subarachnoid haemorrhage" in relation to a person includes death from a terminal event or condition that was contributed to by the person’s subarachnoid haemorrhage;

 

"ICD-10-AM code" means a number assigned to a particular kind of injury or disease in The International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems, 10th Revision, Australian Modification (ICD-10-AM), Seventh Edition, effective date of 1 July 2010, copyrighted by the National Centre for Classification in Health, Sydney, NSW, and having ISBN 978 1 74210 154 5;

 

"intracranial dissecting aneurysm" means a longitudinal splitting of the wall of a cerebral artery which produces a tear in the intima and permits blood to escape between the layers of the vessel wall;

 

"intracranial infective vasculitis due to a specified infection" means infection of the cerebral blood vessels by bacteria, fungi, varicella zoster virus or human immunodeficiency virus.  The infection most frequently originates from septic emboli due to infectious endocarditis and may involve weakening and abnormal dilation of the cerebral artery walls (mycotic aneurysm);

 

"MET" means a unit of measurement of the level of physical exertion.  1 MET = 3.5 ml of oxygen/kg of body weight per minute or 1.0 kcal/kg of body weight per hour, or resting metabolic rate;

 

"pack-year of cigarettes, or the equivalent thereof in other tobacco products" means a calculation of consumption where one pack-year of cigarettes equals twenty tailor made cigarettes per day for a period of one calendar year, or 7300 cigarettes.  One tailor made cigarette approximates one gram of tobacco or one gram of cigar or pipe tobacco by weight.  One pack-year of tailor made cigarettes equates to 7300 cigarettes, or 7.3 kg of smoking tobacco by weight.  Tobacco products means either cigarettes, pipe tobacco or cigars smoked, alone or in any combination;

 

"relevant service" means:

(a) operational service under the VEA;

(b) peacekeeping service under the VEA;

(c)               hazardous service under the VEA;

(d)               warlike service under the MRCA; or

(e)               non-warlike service under the MRCA;

 

"terminal event" means the proximate or ultimate cause of death and includes:

(a) pneumonia;

(b) respiratory failure;

(c) cardiac arrest;

(d) circulatory failure; or

(e)               cessation of brain function;

 

"thrombolytic therapy" means therapeutic administration of a pharmacological agent which breaks up or dissolves blood clots (such as streptokinase or tissue plasminogen activator).

 

Application

10. This Instrument applies to all matters to which section 120A of the VEA or section 338 of the MRCA applies.

 

Date of effect

11. This Instrument takes effect from 1 September 2010.

 

Dated this eighteenth day of  August               2010

 

 

The Common Seal of the  )

Repatriation Medical Authority )

was affixed to this instrument )

in the presence of:   )

 

KEN DONALD

CHAIRPERSON