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The Social Security Administration (SSA) doesn’t always make it easy for those with celiac disease to get the Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI) or Supplemental Security Income benefits they deserve. If you’ve been denied, contact our Florida Celiac Disease Disability Lawyer today. Many claims are denied because SSA says:
(1) You won’t be disabled for at least a year,
(2) Your celiac disease only causes a minimal disruption in your activity and isn’t severe,
(3) Once you have given up gluten-containing foods, you shouldn’t be disabled,
(4) Your celiac disease is not the equivalent of a Medical Listing,
(5) You can return to the lightest job you held in the 15 years before you became disabled, or
(6) There is other work you can do in the mythical national economy based on your age, education, transferable skills and your residual functional capacity.
Not all cases of celiac disease are severe enough to make you eligible for Social Security Disability benefits, but Nancy Cavey has successfully represented many SSA applicants with celiac disease. She works to overcome the claims denial by working closely with you and your physician to show that:
She offers a free initial consultation and welcomes the opportunity to speak with you about your Social Security disability claim.
Celiac disease, gluten-sensitive enteropathy, is a genetically-linked autoimmune disorder that causes damage to the small intestine. Celiac disease can interfere with the ability of the small intestine to absorb nutrients from food.
The symptoms of celiac disease are commonly confused with irritable bowel syndrome and lactose intolerance. The symptoms are many, more than 300, including:
Celiac disease is not included in the SSA’s “Listing of Impairments,” so you won’t automatically be awarded benefits. SSA will determine if your celiac disease is severe enough to equal another listing, such as inflammatory bowel disease (IBS) or weight loss due to a digestive disorder.
Your physician will have to submit a medical source statement confirming that your celiac disease impairments and limitations are the equivalent in severity to the listings for IBS or weight loss due to a digestive disorder.
An IBS Listing 5.06 requires that despite treatment you show, in the same six-month period, you have two of the following:
A weight loss Listing 5.08 requires that you show:
If you don’t equal these listings, SSA then will determine your entitlement to benefits based on medical and vocational criteria at Steps 4 and 5.
If your Celiac disease doesn’t meet a listing, you will have to prove that you:
SSA or, ultimately an Administrative Law Judge, will answer those questions by determining your residual functional capacity. Your RFC is what you can do despite your celiac disease.
The SSA will review your medical records at the Initial Application and Reconsideration stage of the claims process and determine your functional capacity to perform sedentary, light, medium and heavy work.
SSA medical consultants often opine that a Social Security Disability applicant can do light and sedentary work, and that will result in a claims denial. The lower your RFC the more likely that you can’t return to the lightest job you held in the last 15 years or perform other work. SSA doesn’t tell applicants or physicians about the existence and importance of properly completed RFC forms that will explain:
This is not an exhaustive list of all of the questions on a celiac disease RFC form. But you can see that having an explanation of what you can do physically and emotionally is key to winning your case.
Many SSA cases are lost because the applicant did not obtain an RFC or the right RFC form, or because their treating physician didn’t properly complete the RFC form. That is one of the many reasons you should have an experienced Social Security attorney like Nancy L. Cavey represent you in your claim.
Many claims are denied both at the Initial Application and Request For Reconsideration stages of the claims process.
At the hearing stage, the Administrative Law Judge will determine your RFC and give hypotheticals to the vocational evaluator (VE) who will testify at your hearing. The judge will ask the VE to take into consideration your RFC, as determined by the judge, your age, education and prior work experience in determining:
It is crucial that you are represented at a hearing to make sure the right questions are asked of the VE.
If you can’t work any longer because of celiac disease or your doctor has told you to apply for Social Security disability, you should hire our Florida Celiac Disease Disability Lawyer, Nancy Cavey to help you:
The SSA is in the business of denying claims and will use any reason to deny your benefits. The odds of getting your Social Security benefits are greater when you are represented by an experienced Social Security Disability attorney like Ms. Cavey.
You owe it to yourself and your family to get help today! Ms. Cavey can explain the Five-Step Sequential Evaluation process used in every claim, the claims process and how to get your disability benefits. Contact us today for a free consultation at 727-894-3188.