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THE SOCIAL SECURITY OFFICE LOST MY APPEAL PAPERWORK, WHAT DO I DO ?





This type of scenario happens fairly frequently. In fact, there are some social security field offices for which lost appeal paperwork is a weekly phenomenon.

If you submit an appeal for your social security disability or ssi disability case (a request for reconsideration or a request for hearing) and later find, perhaps months later, that the social security office never forwarded the appeal to Disability determination services or the Office of hearings and appeals, or lost the paperwork, you may have little recourse, even if you kept a dated copy of the appeal paperwork you submitted.

In fact, your local social security office may tell you something similar to the following: "We understand that you submitted your appeal in a timely manner; however, we do not control the mail."

Unfortunately, when it comes to appeal paperwork that "never manages to arrive at its destination", there's simply no way to know whether the paperwork was lost in the mail, or lost at the social security office.

For this reason, it is always prudent for a social security disability claimant to followup on paperwork that has been mailed to the social security office.

In other words, to protect yourself make a followup call several days after mailing anything to SSA and always keep a backup copy of anything you submit by mail.



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ANSWERS TO YOUR SSD & SSI QUESTIONS PAGE 3         ANSWERS TO YOUR SSD & SSI QUESTIONS PAGE 4













Additional Questions & Answers re: ssd ssdi ssi


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  4. If I get social security disability, will I get healthcare benefits?

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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          If I get social security disability will I get healthcare benefits ?