social security disability attorney


APPLYING FOR DISABILITY BUT DON'T HAVE MEDICAL HEALTH INSURANCE



This information may help claimants with representation, as well as claimants who are not represented by an attorney or non attorney representative. Understanding how the Social Security Disability system works can make the difference between winning or not winning the continuing disability benefits and backpay to which a person is entitled.

What do I do if I have a disability claim and I do not have much treatment because I do not have medical insurance?


If you haven't been able to go to a doctor to get adequate medical treatment for your impairments due to a lack of health insurance, that is certainly not your fault. An alarming percentage of claimants have very few options for treatment by the time their social security disability or ssi case finally makes it to a hearing before an administrative law judge.



Nonetheless, it goes without saying that disability claims are decided on the basis of medical record documentation.

Not only that, for a disability examiner or judge to conclude that an individual is currently disabled as a result of their impairments, they must have access to medical records that are relatively recent.

As a general rule of thumb, it is advisable for a claimant who appears at a hearing to have been seen by a medical treating source sometime in the last two months.

What does this mean for those have no insurance? Generally, it means going to a county or city health department, a free clinic (if the area the claimant lives in actually has one), or the emergency room of a hospital.

Obviously, a claimant's treatment choices can be fairly limited.



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Read the article No health insurance, no medications


Back to answering your disability questions, page 2


SOCIAL SECURITY DISABILITY SECRETS SOCIAL SECURITY DISABILITY OVERVIEW PT 2 SOCIAL SECURITY DISABILITY QUESTIONS
MORE DISABILITY QUESTIONS SOCIAL SECURITY DISABILITY HOW TO 'S SOCIAL SECURITY DISABILITY TIPS
SOCIAL SECURITY DISABILITY ARTICLES DISABILITY & MEDICAL CONDITIONS SOCIAL SECURITY DISABILITY DEFINITIONS
DISABILITY EXAMINER ANSWERS SOCIAL SECURITY DISABILITY OVERVIEW PT 1 SOCIAL SECURITY DISABILITY MYTHS


SOCIAL SECURITY DISABILITY ATTORNEY, REPRESENTATIVE LAWYER LIST


ANSWERS TO YOUR SSD & SSI QUESTIONS PAGE 1         ANSWERS TO YOUR SSD & SSI QUESTIONS PAGE 2













Disability Questions & Answers re: ssd ssdi ssi


  1. What is the five month waiting period ?

  2. How to speed up your social security disability claim

  3. Overview of the social security disability claims process

  4. What benefits for social security disability include

  5. Do you need an attorney or representative to win a disability case ?

  6. Information on filing a disability claim

  7. Improving the social security disability claim success rate

  8. Social Security Disability Lawyers

  9. Social Security Disability, SSI - Attorney, Lawyer in Wisconsin

  10. For Social Security Disability purposes, when is a person considered disabled and eligible to receive benefits?

  11. When should I apply for social security disability or ssi?

  12. How do I apply for Social Security Disability or ssi?

  13. How is the decision made for my disability claim?

  14. What kind of evidence is used to evaluate and decide my benefit claim?

  15. Disability Lawyer Massachusetts

  16. Disability Lawyer Florida

  17. Disability Lawyer New Jersey

  18. Disability Lawyer Louisiana


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If you suffer from a medical disability such as

hip, neck, shoulder, ankle, wrist, back, or other joint problems, disc herniation, degenerative disc disease, spinal stenosis, carpal tunnel syndrome, rsi or repetetive stress injury, inflammatory bowel disease, ulcerative colitis, irritable bowel syndrome, arthritis, dysthymia, depression or other mood disorders, congestive or chronic heart failure, type 1 diabetes, type 2 diabetes, diabetic neuropathy, high blood pressure (hypertension), seizure disorder, stroke, copd, emphysema, hearing loss or poor hearing, statutory blindness, peripheral field problems or other vision loss, clinical obesity, attention deficit hyperactivity or, simply, adhd, bipolar disorder or manic depression, panic disorder, schizophrenia, autism, head trauma, memory loss, low iq, mental retardation, learning disability, epilepsy, cancer, chronic fatigue, multiple sclerosis, lupus, anxiety, inner ear problems, meniere's, vertigo or dizziness, kidney failure requiring dialysis or other renal problems, cirrhosis, hepatitis, or other liver disease, pancreatitis, osteoarthritis, osteoporosis, asthma, bronchitis, cystic fibrosis, rsd or reflex sympathetic dystrophy, crohn's disease, sarcoidosis, peripheral vascular disease, lyme disease, cerebral palsy, down syndrome, hiv, aids, anemia, sickle cell, thyroid problems including hypothyroidism, esrd or end stage renal disease, reflux, gerd (gastroesophageal reflux disease), cfids, muscular dystrophy, coronary artery disease, cardiomyopathy, or tachycardia, bradycardia or other arrhythmia

and have initiated or been denied on a social security disability, or ssi, claim for benefits, this site may assist you with your case. Social Security Disability benefits are often difficult to win; however many claims for social security disability are lost simply because a claimant did not know enough about the disability process to their social security or ssi claim. For information re: representation on a social security disability or ssi claim (attorney or non attorney representative), see the "questions" & "how" pages.














Social Security Disability questions           How do you apply for social security disability