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rheumatoid arthritis and Social Security disability
rheumatoid arthritis disability
inflammatory arthritis disability

Winning Your Rheumatoid
Arthritis Disability Case

The Main Issue in Your Case

  If your disability case involves rheumatoid arthritis or another form of inflammatory arthritis, you will need to cooperation of your rheumatologist to confirm that the pain and limitation of movement in your joints prevents you from performing any type of substantial work.

  There are two ways to win a rheumatoid arthritis case:

Rheumatoid arthritis and disability strategy one: prove you are disabled by demonstrating that you meet the “listing” for rheumatoid arthritis. The listings are detailed descriptions of various medical conditions published by Social Security. If you meet a listing, it means that Social Security has concluded that SSA recognizes that your rheumatoid (or inflammatory) arthritis is so severe based on your doctor’s findings that SSA can accept that there is no work you could perform. As you might imagine, Social Security makes it difficult to meet the listing for rheumatoid arthritis - if you think that your condition meets the listing, ask your doctor to say so in a written report or on a “listing” form.

Rheumatoid arthritis and disability strategy two: prove you are disabled by showing that your capacity for work has been so diminished by the inflammation and deformity of your joints that you would not be a reliable employee.  The main issue in this type of Social Security disability case is whether or not you are able to work. Although you have to identify a medical reason for your inability to work, you will not win if you focus on the details of your medical condition. Instead, your focus must be the specific ways in which your ability to function has been limited by your condition.

 

What actually happens at your
Social Security Disability Hearing
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Are Your Medical Records Sufficient?

  In a rheumatoid arthritis case, your medical file may look like this: your medical records may consist twenty pages of office notes describing thirty office visits over a three year period of time. In each day’s entry, your doctor may write down how you reported feeling, his impressions as to redness, stiffness, or swelling. Your doctor also may note what medications you are taking, how well they seem to be working and whether he intends to refer you to a specialist for more tests.

  What is missing here? These notes are perfectly good as documentation of your illness and your treatment. However, they may not help you in your Social Security case.

  Social Security, remember, focuses on work activity limitations. There is nothing in these records about how much you can lift, how much you can carry, or how long you can sit. There is also no analysis of your pain in terms of the extent to which your pain interferes with concentration, or causes irritability that might cause tension with co-workers.

  A Social Security adjudicator would not give these notes a second look as they do not even begin to suggest limitations on your functioning nor do they address the specific medical requirements set forth in the rheumatoid arthritis listing. Even an experienced Social Security Judge will not presume to derive specific work limitations from this type of office note. Some judges may, however, recognize the significance of a long treatment history, and might be more inclined to accept limitations set out in your testimony. Other judges, however, are less inclined to believe anything unless it is in your record.

Using Social Security’s Special Language

  As your attorney representative, we would approach this problem by studying your medical record, then creating a checklist form (called a “functional capacity” form) that tracks most of your symptoms, Our forms (which are based on the official Social Security forms) also include the specific functional limitations set forth in the judge’s handbook used by your Social Security Judge. Most experienced Social Security lawyers have their own set up custom forms.  Further, after representing claimants at hundreds of hearings, we know which vocational factors carry the most weight with judges.

  For example, a pain limitation caused by joint swelling and limited movement that causes interference with concentration such that you would not be able to understand and carry out complex job instructions is not particularly limiting, since many jobs exist that only require you to understand and carry out simple job instructions.

  On the other hand a sitting and standing limitation because of swollen knee or ankle joints that says you can stand only 5 minutes at a time and that you must lie down for 30 minutes every three hours is extremely significant since there are no jobs that would permit an unscheduled 30 minute break every three hours.

Getting Cooperation from your Doctor

  Your doctor may truly feel that you cannot work, but if he is not familiar with Social Security practice and procedure, he may not think to complete the most important questions contained in a functional capacity form. Every case is different, however, there are certain activity limitations that seem especially important to Social Security judges. As you might expect, these “threshold” activities relate to job reliability and minimal physical activities.

  Over the years, we have run into some situations in which a client’s doctor “does not want to get involved.” Often this is the result of a bad experience with a legal case in the past - perhaps the doctor was forced to wait around the courthouse for hours, only to be brutally cross-examined by an aggressive lawyer. If your doctor expresses concern about getting involved in a Social Security case, you should explain to him that Social Security judges follow relaxed rules of evidence. Written reports or letters are almost always accepted. Live testimony by the doctor is extremely rare. Further, there is no cross-examination by a hostile lawyer - at the Administrative Law Judge level, there is no “government lawyer” on the other side.

In addition, if you are approved for Disability (Title II) benefits, you will become eligible for Medicare 24 months after your first date of Title II entitlement. Medicare, of course, can be a source of payment for your doctor, and may result in more cooperation.

  As attorney representatives, our experience has been that most caring physicians will agree to spend ten or fifteen minutes to complete a form that can dramatically better your life. If your doctor refuses to cooperate or if he wants to charge you more than $50 to complete a functional capacity form, you may want to think about finding a more cooperative doctor.

Hearing Issues Unique to Arthritis cases

  Rheumatoid arthritis cases often involve issues that may not reflect your case, but have to do with other less serious arthritis cases the judge has seen. To put this another way, you need to be aware that many claimants - perhaps as many as half the claims filed - involve complaints of arthritis. Mild arthritis is a common ailment in most of the population over the age of 40. As a result, your Social Security Judge has seen a lot of claimants who complain of arthritis pain. Because of this experience, many judges tend to play down arthritis as a disabling condition.

  If your case involves an unusually advanced case of osteoarthritis, or rheumatoid arthritis or inflammatory arthritis, or other rare forms of the disease, you may need to educate your Judge in order to win.

 

Should you try to represent yourself at your
Social Security Disability Hearing
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Preparing your Case File for a Hearing

  Sometimes your doctor may simply use the term “arthritis” when he really should use a specific medical term that describes your specific diagnosis. Again, your doctor may not realize that someone else will be reading his office notes; thus terminology accuracy and specificity may not be a priority. Either you or your Social Security representative should review all office notes thoroughly ahead of time to insure that the medical records make sense.

  Would you be surprised to know that most doctor’s notes are handwritten and difficult to read? In several instances, we have had to work with a doctor’s office to “translate” notes so that they could be understood.

  None of this is to suggest that a doctor with sloppy handwriting or sketchy office notes is not a good, caring physician. To the contrary, your doctor’s main focus is his treatment of you. His notes are simply reminders for him to review prior to your visits. For Social Security purposes, however, your doctor’s office notes can make or break your case - thus we see our role as one whereby we “translate” medical findings into work limitations.

How You Should Prepare for your Hearing

  Statistics show that most Social Security claimants are better off with lawyers than without. Since most cases do not involve up-front fees money should not be an issue. Whether you proceed with a lawyer or not, you and/or your lawyer should perform the following tasks: 

  • Review your file thoroughly - make sure that all records of medical treatment are present and up to date.
     
  • Decide on a theory of disability - why are you unable to work. You should be able to boil this down to two or three sentences.
     
  • Give the Judge specific information. Testimony that “it hurts a lot” or “I can’t walk very far” doesn’t say much. Testimony that “I can only stand and walk for 15 minutes every three hours” gives the Judge a specific vocational limitation.

  Most experienced lawyers prepare for hearings by reviewing your claims file two to six weeks prior to the hearing and summarizing the claims information and medical records. By reviewing your file early, your lawyer has enough time to update records and to properly prepare you for your day in Court.

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