Lupus
Like lyme disease, lupus (or systemic lupus erythmatosus)
is a chronic disorder that 1. involves exacerbations and remissions
(i.e. lupus flare-ups) and 2. involves multiple body systems.
However, unlike lyme disease, the social security administration
does actually devote some space in the "blue book" to lupus
claims. For those who are unaware, the blue book is
the impairment listing manual that is used by both social security
disability examiners and administrative law judges alike to render
decisions on ssd and ssi disability claims that involve certain
medical issues (i.e. "listed" impairments such as lupus).
At this point, it may be a good idea to stop and explain, in condensed
form, how the disability process works, what disability examiners
and disability ALJs are, and how the blue
book comes into play in the disability process.
Individuals who pursue disability benefits generally get their
claims started by contacting a local social security office and
requesting that an application for disability benefits be taken.
However, the social security office is only where the process
begins.
After an application has been taken, it is not processed at the
social security office, but, instead, is sent to a state-level
agency whose primary function is to make decisions on disability
cases. In some states, this agency will be known as the bureau
of disability determination, but in most states it bears the title
DDS, which stands for disability determination services. It is
at DDS that disability examiners are based and it is at DDS where
most of the medical development on a disability claim will actually
be performed.
Exactly what is a disability examiner?
In a nutshell, disability examiners make decisions on disability
claims at the initial application and reconsideration levels.
After a claimant has filed an ssi or ssd application at the social
security office, their file is transferred to DDS where it is
assigned to an examiner. Typically, as soon as an examiner receives
a new file, letters are sent out to a claimant's medical providers
for the purpose of gathering records. Once these records have
been received, an examiner will be in a position to make a decision
and close a case.
Unfortunately, more often than not, the decision rendered on a
claim will be a denial and, in all too many cases, a social security
disability or ssi disability claimant will have to request a hearing
before a federal administrative law judge.
How does an ALJ, or administrative
law judge play into the disability evaluation process?
Basically, though administrative law judges operate at a higher
level, they perform the same function as disability examiners.
They read a claimant's records and, if they see the need, will
occasionally require that a claimant be seen at a CE, or consultative
medical examination, in order to obtain more recent
medical information.
Plainly put, disability examiners and ALJs (administrative law
judges) are the adjudicators in the social security administration's
disability system. And they both use the blue book, or SSA impairment
listing manual, in instances where a claimant has a disability
that is listed in the book.
As was stated earlier, lupus is differentiated from lyme disease
in that lupus has a listing (the listing in the blue book is 14.02,
systemic lupus erythmatosus,
under the category of immune system impairments). However, the
lupus listing is also differentiated from most other listings
by the fact that the lupus listing refers mainly to other
listings.
Here's how the listing actually reads:
14.02 Systemic lupus
erythematosus. Documented as described in 14.00B1, with:
A. One of the following:
1. Joint involvement, as described under the criteria in
1.00; or
2. Muscle involvement, as described under the criteria in
14.05; or
3. Ocular involvement, as described under the criteria in
2.00ff; or
4. Respiratory involvement, as described under the criteria
in 3.00ff; or
5. Cardiovascular involvement, as described under the criteria
in 4.00ff or 14.04D; or
6. Digestive involvement, as described under the criteria
in 5.00ff; or
7. Renal involvement, as described under the criteria in
6.00ff; or
8. Hematologic involvement, as described under the criteria
in 7.00ff; or
9. Skin involvement, as described under the criteria in
8.00ff; or
10. Neurological involvement, as described under the criteria
in I 1.00ff, or
11. Mental involvement, as described under the criteria
in 12.00ff.
or
B. Lesser involvement of two or more organs/body systems
listed in paragraph A, with significant, documented, constitutional
symptoms and signs of severe fatigue, fever, malaise, and
weight loss. At least one of the organs/body systems must
be involved to at least a moderate level of severity. |
As one can see, the lupus listing for social security
disability or ssi disability allows for a wide range of discretion
on the part of disability examiners and judges. As paragraph
A states, a claimant with a properly documented lupus diagnosis
can be awarded benefits on the basis of satisfying certain body
system-specific criteria.
However, a disability claimant can also be awarded
benefits via the criteria specified in paragraph B. Paragraph
B of the lupus listing allows a bit of "wiggle room" for claimants
who are unable to meet the exact criteria for any one body system.
However, paragraph B also "ups the ante" by requiring that medical
documentation be shown for 2 body systems (as opposed to just
one body system in paragraph A).
Paragraph B of the lupus listing also requires significant
documentation of the following: severe fatigue, fever, malaise,
and weight loss. And, lastly, paragraph B of the listing requires
that at least one of the two body systems affected by lupus must
involve a moderate level of serverity. Arguably, it is this last
requirement that may pose the largest hurdle for anyone attempting
to meet the paragraph B criteria since "moderate" is, to some
extent, a subjective evaluation.
Of course, many individuals with lupus who are approved
for disability will not be approved as the result of meeting the
requirements of the lupus listing. Instead, they will be awarded
ssd or ssi benefits on the basis of a medical vocational allowance.
A "med-voc allowance" occurs whenever a disability
claimant does not meet the requirements of a listing but is nonetheless
approved via consideration of the following factors: 1. age, 2.
education, 3. work skills, and 4. level of functional limitation.
Essentially, medical vocational allowances work
like this: if a claimant has an impairment that has lasted (or
can be expected to last) twelve full months, and the impairment
is severe enough to prevent the claimant from engaging in one
of their past jobs and also prevents them from engaging in certain
"other" types of work (as determined by age, education, transferrable
work skills, and functional restrictions), then the claimant will
be approved for disability--even if they do not meet the requirements
of a listing, such as the listing for lupus.
Disability benefit approvals based on a medical-vocational
allowance occur far more frequently than approvals made on the
basis of meeting a listing. But in either case, it all comes down
to the information that is contained in a claimant's medical records.
And this fact makes it especially important that a lupus patient's
doctors and other treating sources should make good references
in their treatment notes as to the limitations a patient has as
a result of having lupus.
APPLYING FOR DISABILITY
WITH SCHIZOPHRENIA DISORDER
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