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Social Security Office: Disabilities
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Applying for Social Security Disability benefits requires extensive information about you, your injury or illness, your medical records, and your work history. The more accurate and specific you can be in your application, the greater the chance it will be approved. To know what the SSA wants and how to present it is difficult. Below is what you will need to give SSA to start your claim.
Social Security Disability (Title II) is for workers covered by Social Security who have contributed to a Social Security account while working for a specified period of time, usually 5 out of the last 10 years of work. Disabled widows and widowers of Social Security wage earners may ... qualify.
The CHOICE process is used during the initial face-to-face application interview at a local Social Security office and allows homeless applicants to immediately receive a consultative medical examination appointment, free of charge. Under the previous process, homeless applicants waited until CDSS received the disability claim before assessing the need for a medical exam.
SSI (Supplemental Security Income) provides disability benefits for low income persons not covered by Social Security. It can ... be added to Social Security benefits which are lower than a certain minimum level.
A smart move to make at this point is to secure the services of an attorney with experience dealing with the Social Security disability office. You've already seen how devastating it can be to wait around for compensation. If your application is denied, a disability attorney can file an appeal on your behalf. He or she will likely be able to handle your case in a way that gives you the results you want more quickly than if you'd chosen to go without representation.
In order to be eligible, you must be a child of a person already receiving Disability Insurance Benefits or Retirement Benefits, or who died while covered for Social Security. You must be at least 19 years old, and you must prove your total disability began before the month you turned age 22, and is continuing. The monthly benefit rate is based on a percentage of your parent's rate. Therefore, it is different in each particular case.
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