Guest guest Posted February 13, 2008 Report Share Posted February 13, 2008 Another important factor is to make sure that what your doctor puts down.... matches what you say. We often don't give our doctors the full story. My doctor had me come into the office while she was filling out my paperwork. I brought my paperwork along, and our answers matched. (well not exactly, but you know what I mean) If you say you can't lift five pounds, and your doctor says you have a five pound limitation... that is totally different. Hugs! Vickie Gretchen wrote: (I am assuming that you are trying for SS disability, not SS income, as they are different and the first is disability based and the second income based). If it's SSD, then here is my advise; Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 14, 2008 Report Share Posted February 14, 2008 My sister is a social security lawyer. Recently she had to apply for SS disability for herself. She was approved within 2 ½ weeks. I asked her how she managed that and she said she knows what SS is looking for and she wrote her doctor’s letter herself and gave it to the doc to sign. She said she routinely does this with her client’s doctor’s and has no trouble getting disability approvals first go around and within record time. I was absolutely floored. In addition, knowing the laws, she applied for back pay from the time she stopped working as opposed to the date she first applied, and was awarded the back pay. I thought you could only get the back pay to the date you first applied, but she said that is false. You can get back pay from when you first became disabled, but most folks don’t know that. Sandrea Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 20, 2008 Report Share Posted February 20, 2008 I live in Missouri also, there is a waiting period (it is supposed to be something like 6 months of not working BEFORE you can even APPLY) to prove that you are disabled and cannot work. She needs to discuss disability with her doctors and be sure they are all willing to support her in applying. If they are, ask them to write letters explaining with as much subjective information as possible (the 10% pumping and what that means for her maximum functionality, etc.) why this is disabling and why it will not/cannot be 'fixed' in a short amount of time (if at all). They need to see that not only is she disabled right now, but that it is an ongoing disabling condition. This was the advise I received and I took it so I cannot stress this enough...one of the first couple of packets she will get (the one that is about your daily activities and limits) is EXTREMELY important. Many cases are make or break just from this packet. Explain every answer in as much detail as you can and check and recheck to be sure all of your answers match each other. If you/she doesn't tell them how bad it is on a day to day basis, they have no reason to think it is. I know it is extremely tedious and time consuming, but take it from someone who was approved quickly, the first time - it is so worth it. By the time most people come looking for SSD help, they are already past that, so if I can tell anyone this before they apply, it is worth saying. Also, for the initial interview, they do most of it orally now and you don't bring in as much info as you used to (which is bad) because you have to think of everything on the spot. It is best if someone can go with her to the interview that can help her remember the progression. Also, do not let them send you off without a copy of EVERYTHING you signed. You need to know what you said too (and more importantly, what THEY wrote - as it is not always the same). Before you sign anything go over every question to make sure the answers are correct. You cannot sign the document and then go back in front of a judge and say " But that's not what I said/that's not what happened. " It just doesn't fly. Again, who cares if it takes you 30 minutes, plus - this is YOUR future, they can wait to make sure it's correct. That's what comes to mind right now. Before she goes in for the initial interview, she needs to peruse her medical records so she has a good idea of dates, diagnoses, doctors, etc. If she had any problems with the place she worked because of her condition (increasingly frequent abcenses, not getting work done on time, or coworkers/boss noticing a difference in work performance, physical abilities/appearance) this is the time to exploit that and have them writing letters as well. Ask where the letters should be sent and do not take them in/send them herself. I hope some of that helps. Good luck to her. ~G Re: Social Security form SSA 3373-BK Does she still practice and if so, what state does she practice in? With SS disability does it differ per state? I myself have CFS and get long term disability through my former employer. However, recently I had to apply for SS disability per the long term benefits carrier and of course was turned down. Now I'm waiting for notification of a hearing. I'm not so worried about myself as I do have the benefits, but my sister was just diagnosed with congestive heart failure and her heart is only pumping at 10%. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 20, 2008 Report Share Posted February 20, 2008 In the first paragraph, I meant to say OBJECTIVE not subjective info. Sorry. ~G Re: Re: Social Security form SSA 3373-BK I live in Missouri also, there is a waiting period (it is supposed to be something like 6 months of not working BEFORE you can even APPLY) to prove that you are disabled and cannot work. She needs to discuss disability with her doctors and be sure they are all willing to support her in applying. If they are, ask them to write letters explaining with as much subjective information as possible (the 10% pumping and what that means for her maximum functionality, etc.) why this is disabling and why it will not/cannot be 'fixed' in a short amount of time (if at all). Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 21, 2008 Report Share Posted February 21, 2008 Debbie, They need a detailed description of how you are limited in your daily activities because of your medical condition. This form is optional depending on the preference of your disability caseworker, though this form is very important to support your disability claim. Your disability caseworker never actually gets to meet you or see how your activities are limited because of your condition, so it is very important for you to " show " them how you are limited and can't work by accurately completing this form in detail. And, I mean detail. Ask your family what they see...if you are having trouble. I'm certain easy tasks like getting up, bathing, dressing, cooking, cleaning are all difficult for you. Write and write and write more! If you have to have a proxy write and sign it for you all the better. Just don't give up! You paid for this and deserve to get it. It seems like it is getting harder all the time. I finally got mine in 2001, but a long haul. Finally in 2003, Medicare! That is even more a blessing than the check. So keep pushing girl. Good luck! CJ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 21, 2008 Report Share Posted February 21, 2008 Thanks Gretchen for the really good advice. This is all so new to us and it just seems overwhelming. She has a doctors appt this afternoon so your email came right on time. I will be sure to discuss all of this with her cardiologist. Take care and hope your doing well. Kim Gretchen wrote: I live in Missouri also, there is a waiting period (it is supposed to be something like 6 months of not working BEFORE you can even APPLY) to prove that you are disabled and cannot work. She needs to discuss disability with her doctors and be sure they are all willing to support her in applying. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 22, 2008 Report Share Posted February 22, 2008 What exact kind of letters are you asking for and who is asking? I may have some sample letters my friends wrote trying to support my case.~Kulia > > I'm sorry, I don't have any sample letters to post. My sister and I > live half way across the country from one another and have a very > minimal relationship. I asked her if she would help Kulia and she said > no as she is not licensed in Hawaii and is not carrying malpractice > insurance while she is herself out on disability. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 24, 2008 Report Share Posted February 24, 2008 HI Any helpful information you can give someone to help win. A CFS/Fibro case!!! Who is under 50 yrs!!! My lawyer said if I was over 50 I would be an easy approval!! Thanks, > > What exact kind of letters are you asking for and who is asking? I may > have some sample letters my friends wrote trying to support my > case.~Kulia > > > > > > I'm sorry, I don't have any sample letters to post. My sister and I > > live half way across the country from one another and have a very > > minimal relationship. I asked her if she would help Kulia and she > said > > no as she is not licensed in Hawaii and is not carrying malpractice > > insurance while she is herself out on disability. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 24, 2008 Report Share Posted February 24, 2008 HI Any helpful information you can give someone to help win. A CFS/Fibro case!!! Who is under 50 yrs!!! My lawyer said if I was over 50 I would be an easy approval!! Thanks, > > What exact kind of letters are you asking for and who is asking? I may > have some sample letters my friends wrote trying to support my > case.~Kulia > > > > > > I'm sorry, I don't have any sample letters to post. My sister and I > > live half way across the country from one another and have a very > > minimal relationship. I asked her if she would help Kulia and she > said > > no as she is not licensed in Hawaii and is not carrying malpractice > > insurance while she is herself out on disability. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 25, 2008 Report Share Posted February 25, 2008 I won mine, I pretty much did it myself, if you need to email me feel free, Debbie 31 y/o --- msmambo_2000 wrote: > > HI > > Any helpful information you can give someone to help > win. A CFS/Fibro > case!!! > Who is under 50 yrs!!! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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