Title: Disability: Social Security and SSI
1Disability Social Security and SSI
- AIDS Clinic
- January 30, 2004
2Social Security Disability Benefits
- Monthly cash benefit to disabled persons or their
dependents - Not a needs-based program eligibility is based
on payment of sufficient Social Security taxes - Must have worked long enough and recently enough
(5 out of last 10 years) - Payment amount dependent on wage history
3Supplemental Security Income
- Monthly benefits to aged, blind or disabled
persons - Eligibility based on financial need, considers
income and assets - Payment amount supplements any other income up to
a maximum - Year 2004 maximum payment 564 per month (846
for eligible couple)
4Associated Medical Programs
- SSDI Medicare
- Available after two years of SSDI eligibility (29
months after onset date) - Part A Hospitalization
- Part B Outpatient, tests, etc. (66 annual
premium and 100 annual deductible) - Prescription drug coverage will be weak
5Associated Medical Programs
- SSI Medicaid
- Income based program health care for the poor
- Automatically available to SSI recipients
- Pays doctors, prescriptions, but low
reimbursement rate to providers
6Administrative Process
- Initial application
- Reconsideration
- Administrative Hearing
- Appeals Council Review
- Judicial Review (U.S. District Court)
7DI and SSI DISABILITY Determinations and
Appeals Fiscal Year 2000
Allow 38
Deny 62
Initial Level 1,988,425 Reconsiderations 584,540
ALJ Dispositions 433,584 Appeals
Council 122,780 Federal Court Decisions 12,011
Allow 16
Deny 84
Allow 59
Dismiss 12
Deny 29
Allow 2
Dismiss 2
Remand 22
Deny 74
Allow 6
Dismiss 6
Remand 48
Deny 39
8Definition of Disability
- Severe mental or physical impairment
- Medically verifiable by lab tests, physical
examination or other objective medical procedures - has lasted, or is expected to last, at least
twelve consecutive months or result in death - renders claimant unable to engage in substantial
gainful activity (SGA)
9Five-Step Sequential Evaluation
- Is the claimant doing Substantial Gainful
Activity (SGA)? - Does the claimant have a severe impairment?
- Does the impairment meet or equal a listed
impairment? - Can the claimant do past relevant work?
- Can the claimant do any work existing in
significant numbers?
10Yes
Gainfully Employed?
No
No
Severe Impairment?
Yes
Yes
Meets or equals listing?
No
Yes
Able to do past relevant work?
No
Yes
Able to perform any work existing in significant
numbers?
No
Disabled under listings
Disabled according to vocational factors
Not disabled
11Two important limitations
- Substance Abuse
- Claimant may not received benefits if substance
abuse contributes materially to the finding of
disability (20 CFR 404.1535) - Compliance with treatment
- No benefits if claimant fails to follow
prescribed treatment that would restore ability
to work. (20 CFR 404.1530) - Acceptable excuses treatment contrary to
religion, very risky considers physical, mental,
educational, and linguistic limitations - For HIV infected, common problem is medication
adherence.
12Sequential EvaluationStep 1 Work
- Is the claimant engaged in substantial gainful
activity? - Substantial means work activity that involves
significant physical or mental activities - For 2004, gainful means resulting in income of
810/month (gross income minus impairment related
work expenses)
13Sequential EvaluationStep 2 Severity
- Does the claimant have a severe impairment?
- A severe impairment significantly limits physical
or mental ability to do work activities, such as - physical functions-walking, lifting, carrying
- seeing,hearing, speaking
- understanding and carrying out instructions
- use of judgment
- responding appropriately to supervision
- dealing with changes in work setting
14Sequential EvaluationStep 3 Listings
- Does the impairment, or combination of
impairments, meet or equal a listed impairment?
- Organized by body systems
- Impairments presumed to prevent the ability to
engage in SGA - Each listing includes a diagnosis as well as
certain findings which must be included in
medical records - many listings include durational requirements and
severity levels
15Step 3 HIV Listing
- Part of Immune System Listing -- 14.00 series
- Specifically begins at 14.08, but includes
introductory material which is very important - Requires a positive HIV test PLUS an
AIDS-defining condition - Common examples mycobacterial infection,
candidiasis, cytomegalovirus disease, Kaposis
sarcoma, HIV wasting syndrome, severe diarrhea,
pneumocystis carinii pneumonia - At 14.08N, allows for disability finding with
combination of less severe symptoms resulting in - marked restrictions of activities of daily
living, - marked difficulties in maintaining social
functioning, or - marked difficulties in completing tasks in a
timely manner due to deficiencies in
concentration, persistence or pace
16Step 3 Other Important Listings
- 12.00 -- Mental Disorders
- 12.04 -- Affective Disorders
- Includes depression, a very common problem with
persons with HIV - 12.05 Mental Retardation
- significantly subaverage general intellectual
functioning with deficits in adaptive functioning
initially manifested before age 22 - IQ of 59 or less
- IQ between 60 and 70, combined with another
physical or mental impairment that imposes
work-related limitations - or IQ between 60 and 70 and restriction in
activities of daily living social functioning
concentration, persistence or pace or repeated
episodes of decompensation
17Sequential Evaluation, Step 3Equivalence
Multiple Impairments
- Medical equivalence (20 CFR 404.1526)
- medical findings equivalent in severity and
duration to the listed condition - useful when the claimants condition doesnt
match any listed condition - must be confirmed by a doctor, preferably a
treating physician - must be based on medical evidence
- Combination of Impairments can also be considered
for medical equivalence (20 CFR 404.1523)
18Sequential EvaluationStep 4 Past Work
- Can the claimant perform past relevant work?
- This step evaluates functional ability
- residual functional capacity -- what a person
can do despite his/her limitations - takes into account all limitations, physical and
mental, including those not considered severe - Any work done in the last 15 years is considered
relevant
19Sequential EvaluationStep 5 Other Work
- If a claimant cannot perform past relevant work,
can he/she do other work? - This step assesses physical/mental residual
functional capacity, PLUS age, education and work
experience, transferability of skills - burden of proof shifts to the SSA
20Sequential EvaluationStep 5 - determination
- Two ways to answer this question
- 1. Vocational expert
- expert testifies at hearing about specific jobs
claimant could do - jobs proposed must exist in significant numbers
in the region in which the claimant lives
21Disability Haiku
- Disability
- You have been denied
- Malingerer, whiner, bum...
- Egg-candle, mister
- Hannah Demeritt
22Sequential EvaluationStep 5 - Grids
- Medical-Vocational Guidelines (the grids)
- Guidelines are made up of four charts, one for
each exertional limitation (e.g. claimant limited
to sedentary, light, medium or heavy work) - Claimant is plotted based on age, education and
skill level - Result of disabled/not disabled is dictated by
the chart - Grids are inappropriate if the claimant has
non-exertional impairments (e.g., fatigue,
diarrhea, mental impairments, pain)
23Example Grids residual functional capacity
limited to sedentary work