Norway: 2026 NAV court case over disability benefits

Sounds like the core issue is mismatch between theory-based claims and actual registry outcomes.

If recovery interventions were truly effective at scale, you’d expect to see it reflected in national data, not just individual anecdotes.

The national data will be more reflective of chronicity where the various extent and duration of disability is profiled properly, by authorities making decisions on provision for the disabled. A registry is informed by a hierarchy of individuals deciding on provisions. Maybe national data is ready to deflate theoretical claims based on the anecdotes of authority, despite the mismatch.

Theory-based claims in question all claimed budgets to reduce the costs of disabiity. Providers of education, research, clinics and insurance are not viable if they can only make ends meet by misrepresenting their service and their short-changed clients. I don't know if this can be demonstrated. I suspect theoretical claims do not collect and submit valid clinical statistics.

Some professionals do not want to compete with clients for the budget and do not share in the hallucinations of theoretical claimants. Their decisions will also be reflected in the registry. Maybe the national data reflects the proportion of professional authorities making or denying provision. It sounds like the denial of income for disability income support is still systematic.

So I suppose the state might register it as a recovery or as malingering when terminating or rejecting a claim for disability income support. That would skew a registry. But rejected welfare applicants could show up with medical corroboration. There might be clinics registering more or less profound disabiity, showing up a discrepancy between clinical and financial profiling.
 
There may be warps and gaps in any national data rcollection, but that might not skew the statistics too much. Each country is a bit different. I think UK GPs use a Sno-Med system to register statistcs. Its derived from comparable Australasia. But privacy is abused too much for data to be freely shared. I think the medical data is already being being traded to Palantir.

When first proposed, to put all UK medical records on a central system (called the Spine), many doctors insisted that privacy required them to keep personal data onsite. And its costly to change all their systems. Its all got so complicated, no-one out here knows how the financing of a clinic is structured and how the data is distributed. Any lack of transparency is fishy.

Sharing test results locally can be very helpful if the IT is accessible and hard copy provided. There will be mayhem when people ask to correct all their misinformation on the central record, as it is misinforming education, research, clinics, government and commerce.

Does Norway collect medical profiles from doctors upgrading disabled people, and financial profiling downgrading disabled dependents.

The bigger picture might iron out the wrinkles, reflecting real disability.
 
Come to think of it, we have research that ~50% of doctors in Norway don't believe in the use of Frisklivssentraler (community health centers where you can either be referred or self-referred for mostly lifestyle advice but also other help), yet most municipalities have Frisklivssentraler, and there are encouragement to use them from up high...

On that note, one of the Frisklivssentraler I have been told do good work on POTS and LC wrote a good comment to the guideline :) They've actually learned something from all the patients being sent their way.
 
The national data will be more reflective of chronicity where the various extent and duration of disability is profiled properly, by authorities making decisions on provision for the disabled. A registry is informed by a hierarchy of individuals deciding on provisions. Maybe national data is ready to deflate theoretical claims based on the anecdotes of authority, despite the mismatch.

Theory-based claims in question all claimed budgets to reduce the costs of disabiity. Providers of education, research, clinics and insurance are not viable if they can only make ends meet by misrepresenting their service and their short-changed clients. I don't know if this can be demonstrated. I suspect theoretical claims do not collect and submit valid clinical statistics.

Some professionals do not want to compete with clients for the budget and do not share in the hallucinations of theoretical claimants. Their decisions will also be reflected in the registry. Maybe the national data reflects the proportion of professional authorities making or denying provision. It sounds like the denial of income for disability income support is still systematic.

So I suppose the state might register it as a recovery or as malingering when terminating or rejecting a claim for disability income support. That would skew a registry. But rejected welfare applicants could show up with medical corroboration. There might be clinics registering more or less profound disabiity, showing up a discrepancy between clinical and financial profiling.
The registry data in question was
1) G93.3 diagnoses from the specialist healthcare setting in 2016-2018 (so not GPs - they use a different coding system where ME/CFS falls under «tiredness»).
2) Income from the national tax registries for said people.

The methodology is described in this paper, but there are no «choices» by the government or others that affect this particular data after the diagnosis has been given.
 
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