Tuesday, July 22, 2008

How a Social Security Disability Claim Proceeds

Starting a Claim for Social Security Disability Benefits
To make a claim for Social Security Disability benefits, you need to file an application with the Social Security Administration (SSA). The SSA provides an on-line application form on its website www.ssa.gov. You also can file for Social Security Disability benefits by going to a local SSA office. If you have trouble finding a Social Security Administration office close to your home, call the Social Security Administration toll-free hotline number at 1-800-772-1213. (Deaf and hard-impaired individuals can reach Social Security Administration by TTY at 1-800-325-0778.)

Submitting an Application for Social Security Disability Benefits
Take the time to carefully fill out your Social Security Disability application. Remember that the Social Security Administration will use whatever information you provide to decide if you qualify for Social Security Disability benefits.

Give complete answers to every question. This could help the Social Security staff fully understand the severity of your disability, the limitations that it places on your capacity to work, as well as the prospect that your disabling condition or illness might get better or worse in the future. In addition, the Social Security Administration may process your application more quickly, if you include all the required information on your application form.

If you have trouble understanding all the questions on the application, you have a legal right to ask the SSA to help you. To get assistance, call their toll-free number listed above, or visit a local Social Security Administration office.

Getting an Answer from the SSA about Your Social Security Disability Application
After you send in your application, the SSA may take several weeks or months to review your information and tell you its decision.

If your Social Security Disability benefits are approved, the SSA will send letters to let you know the amount of your benefits and your health coverage options. They will also tell you about your responsibility to report changes in your medical condition, employment status, and other factors that could affect your eligibility for benefits.

Be sure to read and follow all the instructions, to help ensure that your benefits continue for as long as you have a right to receive them.

If the Social Security Administration denied your initial application, you have the legal right to challenge the unfavorable decision by filing an appeal.

Appealing a Denial of Your Benefits
Do not give up, if the SSA denies your claim. In fact, the SSA often rejects the initial applications of individuals who meet all the requirements. Many of these people have to go through the appeal process to get their Social Security benefits approved.

To protect your right to appeal, you must act immediately after you find out that the Social Security Administration disapproved your application. You only have 65 days from the date stamped on the denial letter to ask for another review of your claim.

A Social Security Administrative Law Judge conducts this review, after taking another look at all your Social Security claim information, including your application form, medical records, and additional material you submit to support your claim, and after holding a hearing at which you can present evidence to support your case.

Do not delay filing an appeal. If you miss the 65-day deadline, and decide later to seek Social Security Disability benefits, the SSA will make you go back and start the application process all over again.

Presenting Your Social Security Disability Claim at a Social Security Hearing
When you properly file an appeal before the 65-day deadline, the SSA will schedule an Administrative Law Judge hearing. Usually, it takes between 6 months to 18 months to schedule your hearing date.

The Administrative Law Judge who conducts your hearing will evaluate the following factors, to decide if you should get benefits:
  • Whether or not you accumulated enough Social Security earnings, or “work credits,” to qualify for benefits.
  • If not, whether or not your income and other financial resources are so limited that you may qualify for Supplemental Security Income (SSI).
  • Whether or not you have an impairment that has lasted, or is expected to last, for at least 12 months, or is expected to result in death.
  • The nature and extent of your impairment.
  • Your ability to engage in substantial gainful activity since your impairment began.
  • The date that your disability began.
If the Social Security Administration just denied your application for benefits, or if you already filed an appeal and are waiting for your hearing, take the time to contact an experienced Michigan Social Security lawyer immediately. Our Michigan Social Security law firm represents individuals at this level of appeal. We want to help you get the Social Security Disability benefits you deserve.

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