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Regarding the issue of representation and representatives:
The majority of Social Security Disability and ssi disability claims are denied at the Initial Claim and Reconsideration levels in the state of Indiana.
For this reason, most claims will need to be heard by an Administrative Law Judge before a claimant can hope to get his or her ssdi benefits.
It is at the level of an ALJ hearing that one should always be accompanied by a Disability Attorney or Non Attorney Claimant's Representative.
While a disability attorney or non attorney representative cannot guarantee that a claimant will be awarded social security disability or ssi benefits, such an individual can guarantee that an ssd or ssi case will be properly developed prior to a hearing date.
Can a claimant in Indiana who is not represented by an attorney or non attorney still win an ssd or ssi disability claim at an ALJ hearing? Yes. And, in fact, this does occasionally happen.
However, the odds of winning a social security disability or ssi claim before an Administrative Law Judge are markedly decreased when a claimant does not employ the services of an attorney or non attorney representative; therefore, a claimant should weigh the risk of going unrepresented to a hearing when their future livelihood is literally at stake---particularly when it takes so long to get to a disability hearing in the first place.
And even unrepresented claimants in Indiana who are successful and win their cases may not get the most favorable onset date for the start of their benefits. The date of onset and the date of entitlement, of course, will determine how much a claimant will receive in backpay; therefore, being able to prove the earliest possbile onset is of extreme importance for a social security disability or ssi claimant.
Disability attorneys and lawyers in Indiana do a great many things to ensure that a social security disability or ssi claim will have the most favorable chance of winning ssdi benefits. This includes gathering medical records, obtaining detailed statements from a claimant's treating physicians, and, at the time of the hearing, applying a thorough understanding of SSA regulations and requirements to the disability adjudication process.
Though attorney or non attorney representation is never required in a disability claim, to attend a hearing before a judge in Indiana without the help of a disability attorney or non attorney representative is unwise and may result in a lost opportunity to win ssd or ssi disability benefits.
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