We oversee services for people with Traumatic Brain Injury and/or Spinal Cord Injury and similar disability. Eligibility requirements include having a severe chronic limitation that:
- Is due to a physical impairment, including head injury, spinal cord injury, similar injury or both;
- Is likely to continue indefinitely without intervention;
- Results in substantial functional limitations in at least two life activities; and
- Reflects the person’s need for a combination and sequence of special interdisciplinary or generic care or treatment.
Related Links
Post Acute Rehab Services Info Sheet (PDF)
What is a Medicaid HCB Waiver?
Medicaid Waivers in South Carolina
HASCI Waiver Information Sheet (PDF)
About HASCI
Services for People with Traumatic Brain Injury and/or Spinal Cord Injury and Similar Disability
Definition and Eligibility Criteria for Traumatic Brain Injury, Spinal Cord Injury and Similar Disabilities
All four (4) of the following requirements must be met at the time of applying for eligibility. The condition:
- is attributed to a physical impairment, including traumatic brain injury, spinal cord injury or both, or a similar disability, regardless of age of onset, but not associated with the process of a progressive degenerative illness or dementia or a neurological disorder related to aging;
- is likely to continue indefinitely without intervention;
- results in substantial functional limitations in at least two areas of these life activities: self-care, receptive and expressive communication, learning, mobility, self-direction, capacity for independent living, economic self-sufficiency; and
- reflects the need for a combination and sequence of special interdisciplinary or generic care or treatment or other services which are lifelong or of extended duration and are individually planned or coordinated.
Traumatic brain injury and spinal cord injury are defined by state law as follows
Traumatic brain injury is an injury to the skull or brain caused by an external physical force. The injury may produce a diminished or altered state of consciousness resulting in impairment in cognitive abilities or physical functioning, as well as behavioral and/or emotional functioning. It does not include cerebral vascular accidents (strokes) or aneurysms.
Spinal cord injury is an acute traumatic lesion of neural elements in the spinal canal, resulting in any degree of deficit in sensory, motor and life functions. The deficit may be temporary or permanent.
The South Carolina Code of Laws does not define a "similar disability," but stipulates that a similar disability:
- is not limited by early age of onset;
- is not a condition that culminates in death or worsens over time;
- is not dementia resulting from chronic disease or alcohol/drug use;
- is not a neurological disorder related to aging.
Muscular dystrophy, multiple sclerosis, cancer, Parkinson's disease and other primarily medical conditions DO NOT qualify as a "similar disability.”
