Posttraumatic Stress Disorder E003
Current RMA Instruments
Reasonable Hypothesis SOP | 97 of 2022 |
Balance of Probabilities SOP | 98 of 2022 |
Changes from previous Instruments
ICD Coding
- ICD-10-AM: F43.1
Brief description
PTSD is a mental health disorder that is a reaction to being exposed to a perceived significant psychological trauma. This disorder can follow on from acute stress disorder, or uncommonly, the onset can be delayed until some time after the original trauma.
Confirming the diagnosis
This diagnosis requires a report from a specialist psychiatrist that conforms with the Repatriation Commission Guidelines for Psychiatric Compensation Claims.
Additional diagnoses covered by these SOPs
- Nil
Historic diagnoses that may be covered by these SOPs
- Battle fatigue
- Shell shock
- War or combat neurosis
Conditions not covered by these SOPs
- Acute stress disorder*
- Adjustment disorder*
- Anxiety disorder*
- Chronic multisymptom illness*
- Postconcussion syndrome (not a diease or injury - per RMA declaration)
- Somatoform disorder*
- Unspecified trauma- and stressor-related disorder#
*another SOP applies
# unsatisfactory diagnosis - seek clarification/a more specific diagnosis if possible.
Clinical onset
Onset of PTSD may be immediate, or close in time to any causative traumatic event, or, in a small proportion of cases, may be delayed (by months or years). The diagnostic criteria need to be fulfilled for one month before the diagnosis can be confirmed (onset would then be, retrospectively, at the start of that one month period). Symptoms lasting for less than one month may be diagnosed as acute stress disorder.
For delayed onset PTSD, or for any mental health condition that has diagnostic criteria, the clinical onset will be when the required criteria were first fulfilled, which may be some time after relevant symptoms first developed - i.e., if initially some PTSD symptoms were present, but they were insufficient to meet the diagnostic criteria, then PTSD had not had its clinical onset at that point. It is only once the symptoms fulfil the criteria (and persist for at least one month) that onset has occurred.
Clinical worsening
PTSD can spontaneously resolve, continue as a persistent disorder, or fluctuate with a variable pattern of remissions and relapses. A range of treatment options are available and the effectiveness of treatment varies between types and between individuals.
Source URL: https://clik.dva.gov.au/ccps-medical-research-library/sops-grouped-icd-body-system/n-p/posttraumatic-stress-disorder-e003-f431
Factors in CCPS as at 12 March 2008 (E003)
Current RMA Instruments
Reasonable Hypothesis SOP | 97 of 2022 |
Balance of Probabilities SOP | 98 of 2022 |
Changes from previous Instruments
ICD Coding
- ICD-10-AM: F43.1
Brief description
PTSD is a mental health disorder that is a reaction to being exposed to a perceived significant psychological trauma. This disorder can follow on from acute stress disorder, or uncommonly, the onset can be delayed until some time after the original trauma.
Confirming the diagnosis
This diagnosis requires a report from a specialist psychiatrist that conforms with the Repatriation Commission Guidelines for Psychiatric Compensation Claims.
Additional diagnoses covered by these SOPs
- Nil
Historic diagnoses that may be covered by these SOPs
- Battle fatigue
- Shell shock
- War or combat neurosis
Conditions not covered by these SOPs
- Acute stress disorder*
- Adjustment disorder*
- Anxiety disorder*
- Chronic multisymptom illness*
- Postconcussion syndrome (not a diease or injury - per RMA declaration)
- Somatoform disorder*
- Unspecified trauma- and stressor-related disorder#
*another SOP applies
# unsatisfactory diagnosis - seek clarification/a more specific diagnosis if possible.
Clinical onset
Onset of PTSD may be immediate, or close in time to any causative traumatic event, or, in a small proportion of cases, may be delayed (by months or years). The diagnostic criteria need to be fulfilled for one month before the diagnosis can be confirmed (onset would then be, retrospectively, at the start of that one month period). Symptoms lasting for less than one month may be diagnosed as acute stress disorder.
For delayed onset PTSD, or for any mental health condition that has diagnostic criteria, the clinical onset will be when the required criteria were first fulfilled, which may be some time after relevant symptoms first developed - i.e., if initially some PTSD symptoms were present, but they were insufficient to meet the diagnostic criteria, then PTSD had not had its clinical onset at that point. It is only once the symptoms fulfil the criteria (and persist for at least one month) that onset has occurred.
Clinical worsening
PTSD can spontaneously resolve, continue as a persistent disorder, or fluctuate with a variable pattern of remissions and relapses. A range of treatment options are available and the effectiveness of treatment varies between types and between individuals.
Source URL: https://clik.dva.gov.au/ccps-medical-research-library/statements-principles/n-p/rulebase-posttraumatic-stress-disorder
A category 1A stressor
Current RMA Instruments
Reasonable Hypothesis SOP | 97 of 2022 |
Balance of Probabilities SOP | 98 of 2022 |
Changes from previous Instruments
ICD Coding
- ICD-10-AM: F43.1
Brief description
PTSD is a mental health disorder that is a reaction to being exposed to a perceived significant psychological trauma. This disorder can follow on from acute stress disorder, or uncommonly, the onset can be delayed until some time after the original trauma.
Confirming the diagnosis
This diagnosis requires a report from a specialist psychiatrist that conforms with the Repatriation Commission Guidelines for Psychiatric Compensation Claims.
Additional diagnoses covered by these SOPs
- Nil
Historic diagnoses that may be covered by these SOPs
- Battle fatigue
- Shell shock
- War or combat neurosis
Conditions not covered by these SOPs
- Acute stress disorder*
- Adjustment disorder*
- Anxiety disorder*
- Chronic multisymptom illness*
- Postconcussion syndrome (not a diease or injury - per RMA declaration)
- Somatoform disorder*
- Unspecified trauma- and stressor-related disorder#
*another SOP applies
# unsatisfactory diagnosis - seek clarification/a more specific diagnosis if possible.
Clinical onset
Onset of PTSD may be immediate, or close in time to any causative traumatic event, or, in a small proportion of cases, may be delayed (by months or years). The diagnostic criteria need to be fulfilled for one month before the diagnosis can be confirmed (onset would then be, retrospectively, at the start of that one month period). Symptoms lasting for less than one month may be diagnosed as acute stress disorder.
For delayed onset PTSD, or for any mental health condition that has diagnostic criteria, the clinical onset will be when the required criteria were first fulfilled, which may be some time after relevant symptoms first developed - i.e., if initially some PTSD symptoms were present, but they were insufficient to meet the diagnostic criteria, then PTSD had not had its clinical onset at that point. It is only once the symptoms fulfil the criteria (and persist for at least one month) that onset has occurred.
Clinical worsening
PTSD can spontaneously resolve, continue as a persistent disorder, or fluctuate with a variable pattern of remissions and relapses. A range of treatment options are available and the effectiveness of treatment varies between types and between individuals.
Source URL: https://clik.dva.gov.au/ccps-medical-research-library/statements-principles/n-p/posttraumatic-stress-disorder-e003-f431/rulebase-posttraumatic-stress-disorder/category-1a-stressor
A category 1B stressor
Current RMA Instruments
Reasonable Hypothesis SOP | 97 of 2022 |
Balance of Probabilities SOP | 98 of 2022 |
Changes from previous Instruments
ICD Coding
- ICD-10-AM: F43.1
Brief description
PTSD is a mental health disorder that is a reaction to being exposed to a perceived significant psychological trauma. This disorder can follow on from acute stress disorder, or uncommonly, the onset can be delayed until some time after the original trauma.
Confirming the diagnosis
This diagnosis requires a report from a specialist psychiatrist that conforms with the Repatriation Commission Guidelines for Psychiatric Compensation Claims.
Additional diagnoses covered by these SOPs
- Nil
Historic diagnoses that may be covered by these SOPs
- Battle fatigue
- Shell shock
- War or combat neurosis
Conditions not covered by these SOPs
- Acute stress disorder*
- Adjustment disorder*
- Anxiety disorder*
- Chronic multisymptom illness*
- Postconcussion syndrome (not a diease or injury - per RMA declaration)
- Somatoform disorder*
- Unspecified trauma- and stressor-related disorder#
*another SOP applies
# unsatisfactory diagnosis - seek clarification/a more specific diagnosis if possible.
Clinical onset
Onset of PTSD may be immediate, or close in time to any causative traumatic event, or, in a small proportion of cases, may be delayed (by months or years). The diagnostic criteria need to be fulfilled for one month before the diagnosis can be confirmed (onset would then be, retrospectively, at the start of that one month period). Symptoms lasting for less than one month may be diagnosed as acute stress disorder.
For delayed onset PTSD, or for any mental health condition that has diagnostic criteria, the clinical onset will be when the required criteria were first fulfilled, which may be some time after relevant symptoms first developed - i.e., if initially some PTSD symptoms were present, but they were insufficient to meet the diagnostic criteria, then PTSD had not had its clinical onset at that point. It is only once the symptoms fulfil the criteria (and persist for at least one month) that onset has occurred.
Clinical worsening
PTSD can spontaneously resolve, continue as a persistent disorder, or fluctuate with a variable pattern of remissions and relapses. A range of treatment options are available and the effectiveness of treatment varies between types and between individuals.
Source URL: https://clik.dva.gov.au/ccps-medical-research-library/statements-principles/n-p/posttraumatic-stress-disorder-e003-f431/rulebase-posttraumatic-stress-disorder/category-1b-stressor
A significant other who experiences a category 1A stressor
Current RMA Instruments
Reasonable Hypothesis SOP | 97 of 2022 |
Balance of Probabilities SOP | 98 of 2022 |
Changes from previous Instruments
ICD Coding
- ICD-10-AM: F43.1
Brief description
PTSD is a mental health disorder that is a reaction to being exposed to a perceived significant psychological trauma. This disorder can follow on from acute stress disorder, or uncommonly, the onset can be delayed until some time after the original trauma.
Confirming the diagnosis
This diagnosis requires a report from a specialist psychiatrist that conforms with the Repatriation Commission Guidelines for Psychiatric Compensation Claims.
Additional diagnoses covered by these SOPs
- Nil
Historic diagnoses that may be covered by these SOPs
- Battle fatigue
- Shell shock
- War or combat neurosis
Conditions not covered by these SOPs
- Acute stress disorder*
- Adjustment disorder*
- Anxiety disorder*
- Chronic multisymptom illness*
- Postconcussion syndrome (not a diease or injury - per RMA declaration)
- Somatoform disorder*
- Unspecified trauma- and stressor-related disorder#
*another SOP applies
# unsatisfactory diagnosis - seek clarification/a more specific diagnosis if possible.
Clinical onset
Onset of PTSD may be immediate, or close in time to any causative traumatic event, or, in a small proportion of cases, may be delayed (by months or years). The diagnostic criteria need to be fulfilled for one month before the diagnosis can be confirmed (onset would then be, retrospectively, at the start of that one month period). Symptoms lasting for less than one month may be diagnosed as acute stress disorder.
For delayed onset PTSD, or for any mental health condition that has diagnostic criteria, the clinical onset will be when the required criteria were first fulfilled, which may be some time after relevant symptoms first developed - i.e., if initially some PTSD symptoms were present, but they were insufficient to meet the diagnostic criteria, then PTSD had not had its clinical onset at that point. It is only once the symptoms fulfil the criteria (and persist for at least one month) that onset has occurred.
Clinical worsening
PTSD can spontaneously resolve, continue as a persistent disorder, or fluctuate with a variable pattern of remissions and relapses. A range of treatment options are available and the effectiveness of treatment varies between types and between individuals.
Source URL: https://clik.dva.gov.au/ccps-medical-research-library/statements-principles/n-p/posttraumatic-stress-disorder-e003-f431/rulebase-posttraumatic-stress-disorder/significant-other-who-experiences-category-1a-stressor
No appropriate clinical management for posttraumatic stress disorder
Current RMA Instruments
Reasonable Hypothesis SOP | 97 of 2022 |
Balance of Probabilities SOP | 98 of 2022 |
Changes from previous Instruments
ICD Coding
- ICD-10-AM: F43.1
Brief description
PTSD is a mental health disorder that is a reaction to being exposed to a perceived significant psychological trauma. This disorder can follow on from acute stress disorder, or uncommonly, the onset can be delayed until some time after the original trauma.
Confirming the diagnosis
This diagnosis requires a report from a specialist psychiatrist that conforms with the Repatriation Commission Guidelines for Psychiatric Compensation Claims.
Additional diagnoses covered by these SOPs
- Nil
Historic diagnoses that may be covered by these SOPs
- Battle fatigue
- Shell shock
- War or combat neurosis
Conditions not covered by these SOPs
- Acute stress disorder*
- Adjustment disorder*
- Anxiety disorder*
- Chronic multisymptom illness*
- Postconcussion syndrome (not a diease or injury - per RMA declaration)
- Somatoform disorder*
- Unspecified trauma- and stressor-related disorder#
*another SOP applies
# unsatisfactory diagnosis - seek clarification/a more specific diagnosis if possible.
Clinical onset
Onset of PTSD may be immediate, or close in time to any causative traumatic event, or, in a small proportion of cases, may be delayed (by months or years). The diagnostic criteria need to be fulfilled for one month before the diagnosis can be confirmed (onset would then be, retrospectively, at the start of that one month period). Symptoms lasting for less than one month may be diagnosed as acute stress disorder.
For delayed onset PTSD, or for any mental health condition that has diagnostic criteria, the clinical onset will be when the required criteria were first fulfilled, which may be some time after relevant symptoms first developed - i.e., if initially some PTSD symptoms were present, but they were insufficient to meet the diagnostic criteria, then PTSD had not had its clinical onset at that point. It is only once the symptoms fulfil the criteria (and persist for at least one month) that onset has occurred.
Clinical worsening
PTSD can spontaneously resolve, continue as a persistent disorder, or fluctuate with a variable pattern of remissions and relapses. A range of treatment options are available and the effectiveness of treatment varies between types and between individuals.
Source URL: https://clik.dva.gov.au/ccps-medical-research-library/statements-principles/n-p/posttraumatic-stress-disorder-e003-f431/rulebase-posttraumatic-stress-disorder/no-appropriate-clinical-management-posttraumatic-stress-disorder
The traumatic death of a significant other
Current RMA Instruments
Reasonable Hypothesis SOP | 97 of 2022 |
Balance of Probabilities SOP | 98 of 2022 |
Changes from previous Instruments
ICD Coding
- ICD-10-AM: F43.1
Brief description
PTSD is a mental health disorder that is a reaction to being exposed to a perceived significant psychological trauma. This disorder can follow on from acute stress disorder, or uncommonly, the onset can be delayed until some time after the original trauma.
Confirming the diagnosis
This diagnosis requires a report from a specialist psychiatrist that conforms with the Repatriation Commission Guidelines for Psychiatric Compensation Claims.
Additional diagnoses covered by these SOPs
- Nil
Historic diagnoses that may be covered by these SOPs
- Battle fatigue
- Shell shock
- War or combat neurosis
Conditions not covered by these SOPs
- Acute stress disorder*
- Adjustment disorder*
- Anxiety disorder*
- Chronic multisymptom illness*
- Postconcussion syndrome (not a diease or injury - per RMA declaration)
- Somatoform disorder*
- Unspecified trauma- and stressor-related disorder#
*another SOP applies
# unsatisfactory diagnosis - seek clarification/a more specific diagnosis if possible.
Clinical onset
Onset of PTSD may be immediate, or close in time to any causative traumatic event, or, in a small proportion of cases, may be delayed (by months or years). The diagnostic criteria need to be fulfilled for one month before the diagnosis can be confirmed (onset would then be, retrospectively, at the start of that one month period). Symptoms lasting for less than one month may be diagnosed as acute stress disorder.
For delayed onset PTSD, or for any mental health condition that has diagnostic criteria, the clinical onset will be when the required criteria were first fulfilled, which may be some time after relevant symptoms first developed - i.e., if initially some PTSD symptoms were present, but they were insufficient to meet the diagnostic criteria, then PTSD had not had its clinical onset at that point. It is only once the symptoms fulfil the criteria (and persist for at least one month) that onset has occurred.
Clinical worsening
PTSD can spontaneously resolve, continue as a persistent disorder, or fluctuate with a variable pattern of remissions and relapses. A range of treatment options are available and the effectiveness of treatment varies between types and between individuals.
Source URL: https://clik.dva.gov.au/ccps-medical-research-library/statements-principles/n-p/posttraumatic-stress-disorder-e003-f431/rulebase-posttraumatic-stress-disorder/traumatic-death-significant-other