Learn to Cope with the Stress of Applying for Social Security Disability Benefits

When suffering from a severe disability, it is easy to get overwhelmed. Besides the enormous everyday effort required of anyone living with a severe disability, you must juggle doctors’ appointments, medical treatments, and hospital stays. You are unable to work causing your income to plummet along with your energy level.

Don't Wait for a One-Time Physical Examination to Get Disability Benefits - Visit a Doctor Regularly

Submitted by Daniel on

You will probably have lived with your disability for awhile before you apply for Social Security disability benefits, and you will understand very well the impact your condition has on your daily life. Because you have been seeing doctors and having tests and taking medication and undergoing treatments for weeks or months, your doctors also have a good idea of the effect of your disabling condition on your ability to function.

It's Difficult Enough to Get Disability Benefits - Learn How to Keep Them

Submitted by Daniel on

If you become so severely disabled that you can no longer work and if you are granted Social Security disability benefits, you may wonder if you have to do anything to keep those benefits. The general rule of thumb is that if you remain disabled to the point you cannot work, you are entitled to disability benefits until you reach retirement age. Your benefits will not stop coming at retirement age. Instead, you will no longer receive “disability” benefits but rather “retirement” benefits. The name changes, but the benefits do not.

The SSA Works to Improve Its Image Among the Disabled - No Easy Task

Submitted by Chris on

Under political attack as a black hole in the budget, the Social Security Administration (SSA) is working hard to improve its image. Acknowledging the long wait disabled people must put up with, the SSA is opening new offices and hiring more case evaluators. That’s wonderful news for those who are seeking a hearing.

Experts Recommend Help When Claiming Disability

Submitted by Shane on

It has never been easy to be approved for Social Security disability benefits. The disability application process is complicated and cumbersome, and the lag time between filing a claim and being granted or denied disability benefits is notoriously long. In the current economy, where more and more people are losing their jobs and their health benefits, the process can be even more difficult.

Proponents of Social Security Disability Benefits Defend the Program

Submitted by Daniel on

While those who lead the charge in advocating cuts to Social Security’s benefits programs, including Social Security disability benefits, insist that cutting these programs will help balance the budget, others disagree. Intent on preserving the system, Social Security advocates say that proposed cuts to the system will have little or no effect on the budget or the deficit.

Disability Beneficiaries Depend on Social Security

Submitted by Shane on

In a political atmosphere in which the elderly and disabled may be asked to accept cuts in their benefits, there seems to be little patience for the assertion that the benefits being paid are too small. However, the National Alliance on Mental Illness has recently done just that, pointing out that SSI income to the mentally ill (and, by extension, other severely disabled people looking to that program for assistance) barely covers housing expenses.

Reports Show that Individuals with Disabilities Want to Work

Submitted by Daniel on

The Department of Labor issued two reports this year indicating that the Department’s One-Stop Career Centers are being used by many disabled people who are receiving benefits from Social Security Disability (SSDI) and Supplemental Security Income (SSI). The One-Stop Career Centers were established by the Workforce Investment Act of 1998 and are intended to help job seekers of all types, not just the those receiving SSDI and SSI disability benefits.

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