would coronary heart disease qualify a person for social security disability?
Question:
Answers:
Depending on the degree to which it affects your ability to work at what every your usual line of work is, yes or no. If you are restricted enough that you can't work, then yes. If not, no. The first answer is absolutely wrong. The only way to find out is to apply for the disability. If you get rejected you can appeal a number of times, as with Supplementary Security Income. When you are told that you have no more appeals, then ask for arbitration with a judge. Whatever the judge decides is binding. If the judge rules that you are disabled, you'll receive payments from the time you filed if you don't let any time limits expire. The same pretty much holds true for SSI. If you don't qualify for Social Security, you might try SSI. My wife received Social Security Benefits for a couple of years until she qualified for her regular Social Security pension. I received SSI until I qualified for my Social Security pension also. Talk to an attorney who specializes in Social Security claims and get a legal opinion. If the attorney takes your case, you'll have to pay about 25% of your benefits owed to you. If you don't win the case, the attorney will charge you nothing.
Other Answers:
Honestly, You could be on your death bed and Social Security will STILL Deny You.. You have to Really be willing to fight for it!
no I doubt it! If you cannot work for a year, apply if you like!
checks already in the mail lol
No..
But a heart specialist would have to put that in writting.
If you wanted disability for that condition. a friend a had heart attack. got cured and then applied for
disabilty. waited 6 months and got it. all you need is a doctor
to testify for you. You think those guys decide on any rational basis whatsoever? I don't. I've heard too many stories of people who are actually OK getting on it, and people who are seriously incapacitated being denied. Apparently they deny everyone at first, and you have to go through the appeal process to a certain degree before they start taking you seriously. It may also depend on who your doctor is. If they have certain doctors' names flagged as more likely to be processing fraudulent claims, that will slow you down without your ever knowing why.
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