SSDRC




Filing a Social Security Disability Application - How to File & the Information that is Needed by SSA

Do you need a Lawyer at the Administrative Law Judge Disability Hearing?

Social Security Disability Back pay and How Long it Takes to Qualify for it

How do you prove your disability case if you have a mental condition?

What Can I Do to Improve My Chances of Winning Disability Benefits

Common Mistakes after Receiving a Denial of benefits

If You Get Approved For SSDI Will You Also Get Medicare?

How much is paid for the Social Security Disability Attorney Fee?

How long does it take to be approved for SSI or Social Security disability?

How To Get Disability Through SSDI or SSI Approved

Should you get Help from a Disability Attorney before the Claim has been Denied?

Answers to questions about SSD and SSI disability

Qualifying for Disability - What is Social Security Looking for?

How do I check the status of my Social Security disability claim?

What Expenses Will A Social Security Attorney Charge In Addition To The Fee?


Facts about Anxiety Attacks and Filing for Disability


How to prove you are disabled
and win disability benefits


 
1. Anxiety attacks, also known as panic attacks, are moments of intense fear, when no threat actually exists. They come on suddenly with symptoms that can mimic a medical emergency.

2. During an anxiety attack, the affected individual may experience a wide variety of symptoms. This includes rapid heart rate, hot flashes and sweating or chills, shaking and trembling, shortness of breath, hyperventilation, chest pain, trouble swallowing and tight throat, feeling dizzy or faint, headache, nausea and abdominal cramping.

3. Many people seek emergency medical care due to the symptoms of a panic attack, fearing that they are having a heart attack or a life-threatening side effect of an undiagnosed medical condition. When in doubt, it is important to seek help to rule out serious conditions.

4. Anxiety attacks usually last for about a half hour, reaching peak intensity after 10 minutes. Sometimes they may last much longer, up to an entire day.

5. Most people have experienced or will experience an anxiety attack during his or her life. Some people, however, have panic disorder. This disorder is characterized by frequent anxiety attacks, which often causes fear of having an attack. Anxiety attacks can occur anywhere at anytime, and often the fear of panic can be limiting to those who experience frequent episodes.

6. Anxiety attacks resemble the instinctive response of fear when faced with a dangerous situation. Although the cause of panic attacks are unknown, this resemblance is an indication that the same part of the brain may be involved.

7. In addition to brain function, it is thought that genetics and stress play a role in the likelihood of experiencing low-grade anxiety and anxiety attacks. Stressors may include significant life changes such as having a baby or mourning a death, traumatic events like an accident or violence, or a childhood history of abuse and violence.


Can you qualify for disability benefits with this condition?

Whether or not you qualify for disability and, as a result, are approved for disability benefits will depend entirely on the information obtained from your medical records. This includes whatever statements may have been obtained from your treating physician (a doctor who has a history of treating your condition and is, therefore, qualified to comment as to your condition and prognosis).

It will also depend on the information obtained from your vocational, or work, history if you are an adult, or academic records if you are a minor-age child. The important thing to keep in mind is that the social security administration does not award benefits based on simply having a condition, but, instead, will base an approval or denial on the extent to which a condition causes functional limitations. Functional limitations can be great enough to make work activity not possible (or, for a child, make it impossible to engage in age-appropriate activities).

Why are so many disability cases lost at the disability application and reconsideration appeal levels?

Speaking as a former Disability Claims Examiner, I can state that there are several reasons:

1) Social Security makes no attempt to obtain a statement from a claimant's treating physician. By contrast, at the hearing level, a claimant and his or her disability attorney will generally obtain and present this type of statement to a judge;

2) Prior to the hearing level, a claimant will not have the opportunity to explain how their condition limits them, nor will their attorney or representative have the opportunity to make a presentation based on the evidence of the case. At the hearing level, of course, this is exactly what happens. And a number of disability representatives will also take such steps even earlier, at the reconsideration appeal level;

3) Disability judges, unlike disability examiners who decides cases at the first two levels of the system, can make independent decisions without being overturned by immediate supervisors--which happens frequently.















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Topics and Questions


  • Who will decide my Social Security disability claim ?

  • How do you get Disability Approved when you file with Social Security?

  • Social Security Disability Back pay

  • Who makes the Determination of a Social Security Disability Claim?

  • How long does it take to get a Social Security Disability or SSI decision ?

  • How to apply for social security disability benefits for children

  • How Important is the Treating Physician to a Social Security Disability or SSI case?

  • Why does Representation increase the win ratio at a Social Security Disability or SSI Hearing?

  • What is a disability according to the Social Security Administration?

  • What does social security mean by disability, i.e. what is the definition?

  • What does the social security administration definition of disability actually say?

  • Why do I need an attorney for Social Security disability ?

  • Social Security Disability Children Benefits

  • How Quick Is The Disability Claim Decision Made?

  • What Happens When You File an SSI or Social Security Disability Application?

  • Can I Qualify For Disability and Receive Benefits based on Depression?

  • How to Claim Disability When you Have a Medical Problem






















    Other Links

  • South Carolina Disability Lawyer

  • Tennessee Disability Lawyer

  • Texas Disability Lawyer

  • Utah Disability Lawyer

  • Huntington's Disease and Filing for Disability

  • Hydrocephalus and Filing for Disability

  • Hyperhidrosis and Filing for Disability

  • Hidradenitis Suppurtiva and Filing for Disability

  • High Cholesterol and Filing for Disability

  • Hip Replacement Surgery and Filing for Disability

  • Diverticulitis and Filing for Disability

  • Down Syndrome and Filing for Disability

  • Duchenne's Muscular Dystrophy and Filing for Disability

  • Cirrhosis and Filing for Disability

  • Closed Head Injury and Filing for Disability

  • Colon Cancer and Filing for Disability

  • Filing for Social Security Disability or SSI with Crohn's Disease

  • Social Security Disability SSI and Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI)

  • Why Is It Hard to be Found Disabled for Social Security Disability or SSI for Seizures?

  • Can a child receive disability benefits for asthma?

  • Can you apply for disability if you have a mental condition ?

  • Are SSI and Social Security Disability Requirements Tougher For Mental Claims?




















    SSD and SSI are Federal Programs

    The title II Social Security Disability and title 16 SSI Disability programs operate under federal guidelines and, therefore, the program requirements--medical and non-medical--apply to all states:

    Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Idaho, Indiana, Illinois, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Vermont, Virginia, Washington, West Virginia, Wisconsin, Wyoming

    Recent approval and denial statistics for various states can be viewed here:

    Social Security Disability, SSI Approval and Denial Statistics by state

    Special Section: Disability Lawyers and unnecessary claim denials