
17 janvier, 2008 11:35
Disability Benefits Resources
FYI: Information About Filing For Social Security Disability Benefits
NEW YORK, Jan. 14, 2008
(CBS) American workers pay part of each paycheck into Social Security disability insurance. And that federal money goes toward paying benefits to those who are injured - and can no longer work.
Each year, 2.5 million people apply to get some of that money back, in the form of disability benefits. But most applicants are denied.
A two-month investigation by CBS News found that this safety net might not be there when the most vulnerable of Americans need it most.
The following are resources about disability insurance compiled by our Investigative Unit.
The Basics
Check out the official Web site of the Social Security Administration.
For the Veterans Administration, .
Find out more about housing for people living with disabilities at the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development.
The Department of Labor has information about working with a disability here.
More resources are available at the American Association of People with Disabilities.
Check out the National Organization of Social Security Claimants’ Representatives, which provides representation and advocacy on behalf of those seeking Social Security and Supplemental Security income.
Also, check out the Web site of the National Association of Disability Representatives here.
Seeking help from a community of people living with disabilities? Check out the Handicap and Awareness Support League.
For Information about Applying for Disability, visit the Social Security Administration disability Web site.
To get more general information about Social Security Disability, .
The SSA also has information about efforts to identify and implement compassionate allowances for children and adults. Learn more here.
Dig Deeper
Check out the Social Security Administration plan to reduce the hearings Backlog and Improve Public Service or its 2007 end-of-year fiscal report (.pdfs).
The Social Security Disability Coalition offers free information and support, with a focus on SSDI reform. Check it out here.
For information on the Fullerton - Edwards Social Security Disability Reform Act, click here.
Think it couldn't happen to you? Read a first-person account of injury (graphic content) here.
Information for specific injuries or illnesses
The Social Security Administration (SSA) recognizes MS as a chronic illness or "impairment" that can cause disability severe enough to prevent an individual from working.
Check out what the MS Society is doing to help individuals in trying to prevent difficulties in securing SSDI coverage.
Or, check out the Muscular Dystrophy Association.
For mental health resources, visit the Web site of the National Mental Health Association.
The Invisible Disabilities Advocate is another resource. Visit it here.
Getting the Benefits you Deserve
Allsup, Inc., is a for-profit company that helps individuals in applying for Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI) benefits. The company's Web site includes several resource sheets, including:
Disability eligibility evaluation
To help individuals with disabilities apply for and receive the benefits they deserve, Allsup provides its "Top 10 Tips for Breaking through the Backlog."
5. Prepare an accurate medical record. A comprehensive factual record is required to convince the government to provide benefits.
6.Establish your work history. Compile records of dates and tenure of previous employment. As noted above, individuals must have worked for five of the previous 10 years to qualify for benefits.
7. Meet deadlines. If benefits are denied at any stage of the process, claimants have only 60 days to file an appeal. If the deadline is missed, the process starts over from the beginning.
8. Reduce spending. The long wait for benefits means that people lose their savings, their cars and sometimes even their homes. Cut out unnecessary spending as quickly as possible and prepare for the long haul. And don’t use credit cards. Allsup reminds applicants that high-interest debt will add to long-term problems. There may be other, more affordable options for handling expenses.
9. Maintain health insurance. There will be a temptation to cut spending on insurance, but Allsup notes that even after individuals begin receiving disability benefits there is a two-year waiting period for Medicare eligibility.
10. Don’t give up. The Social Security Administration denies more than 60 percent of all initial applications, but two-thirds of the people who appeal eventually will receive their benefits.