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The Main Issue in Your Case
The main issue in your Social
Security disability case is whether or not your heart
disease prevents you from being 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
heart disease. Instead, your focus must be the specific
ways in which your ability to function has been limited by
your cardiac condition.
What Actually Happens at Your
Social Security Disability Hearing?
Are Your Medical Records Sufficient?
In many heart disease cases, you
will see handwritten notes from either a primary care
physician, a cardiologist or a cardiac surgeon. The good
new about this is that many patients with heart disease
have a consistent history of regular visits to a doctor,
as well as a solid professional relationship with that
doctor.
You should be aware that heart
disease is a fairly common medical condition and the
seriousness of a heart condition can range from
"manageable" to "critical." Social Security decision
makers will look for some very specific things in your
medical record. There are basically three ways to win a
heart disease case:
(1) you can meet the "listing"
for diabetes as set forth at 4.00 (Cardiovascular
System - Adult);
(2) you can prove that your
"functional capacity" for work been so diminished by
damage to your heart that you would not be able to
reliably perform any kind of job - even a simple, sit
down type of job?;
(3) your relatively mild heart
disease in combination with other medical problems
(such as breathing problems or diabetes) leave you
unable to reliably perform any kind of job
Let’s review each way you can win a
diabetes case:
(1) meeting the listing at 4.00.
The medical listing at 4.00 says the following about
cardiovascular disease:
Cardiovascular impairment
results from one or more of four
consequences of heart disease:
1. Chronic heart failure or
ventricular dysfunction.
2. Discomfort or pain due to
myocardial ischemia (lack of oxygen blood flow to the
heart), with or without necrosis of heart muscle.
3. Syncope (loss of consciousness
due to insufficient flow of blood to the brain), or near
syncope, due to inadequate cerebral perfusion from any
cardiac cause such as obstruction of flow or disturbance
in rhythm or conduction resulting in inadequate cardiac
output.
4. Central cyanosis (bluish
discoloration of the skin caused by lack of oxygen in the
blood) due to right-to-left shunt, arterial desaturation,
or pulmonary vascular disease.
Summary:
in general, to prove you meet the heart disease listing,
your medical record will need to show that your heart
muscle is damaged and cannot pump enough oxygen enriched
blood, or that there is a blockage in the blood vessels
leading to your heart. To meet the listing, your record
will need to contain evidence from testing such as the ECG
(electrocardiogram), exercise testing, MRI or CT scans, or
other diagnostic testing.
The cardiac listing is one of the
more comprehensive listings published by Social Security
and it reflects a recognition that advance heart disease
is often permanent and very disabling. If you think you
meet the listing for heart disease, ask your doctor to
prepare a narrative report referencing the listing or ask
your attorney to prepare a checklist tracking the medical
requirements of the listing as they relate to your
condition.
(2) Significant interference with
your capacity to engage in competitive work - as noted
above, the "listing" for heart disease requires evidence
produced by certain diagnostic tests. If your condition
does not meet the listing, you may still have a good
argument for disability.
You may find that your doctor is not
willing to commit to stating that you meet the listing for
heart disease. This may be because there are other cases
in his office that are worse than yours or because your
doctor does not want to be responsible for concluding that
you are "disabled." In these situations, you may be able
to obtain his support by asking him to give an opinion
regarding specific functional limitations that arise from
your cardiac condition.
A "functional capacity" opinion can
be provided in a letter format or, preferably, in a
checklist form.
As the main issue in a Social
Security case has to do with job reliability, you should
ask your doctor to comment about how your heart disease
would impact your ability to perform specific job tasks
and about how it would affect your reliability (i.e.
unscheduled breaks or missed days from work). Do not
forget that some medication side effects can create
activity limitations. Activity limitations in general are
often referred to by SSA as "exertional limitations." In
addition, heart disease can result in significant chest
pain (angina) as well as anxiety or depression. Pain or
depression/anxiety are referred to as "non-exertional"
limitations because they affect your state of mind, and
ability to concentrate or focus.
(3) Heart disease complications
in addition to other medical problems - as noted
above, heart disease is a medical condition that often
gets worse over time. If your complications are only
beginning to appear, you may find that your doctor is not
willing to commit to the severe limitations set out in the
"listing" nor is he willing to identify enough functional
capacity limitations to fully disable you.
In this situation, the limitations
caused by your heart disease may be only mildly severe,
yet still useful in a disability determination. For
example, if you have some blockage in your heart, you may
not be able to exert yourself, walk long distances or
handle hot and cold temperature extremes. You may also
have high blood pressure which can create headaches or
lightheadedness. Heart patients with diabetes may have
problems with vision or may experience numbness and
tingling in their hands and feet. And it is not at all
uncommon for a heart patient with other complications to
experience bouts of depression, anxiety or anger control
problems.
Taken in combination with other
limitations, and with the expectation that your condition
will worsen, even mild heart disease can help tip the
balance in your favor if you have some other significant
medical problem. After all, your Judge or someone in his
family may have a heart condition with firsthand knowledge
of how this disease can impact your life.
Make sure that you help your case by
reporting your symptoms accurately to your doctor. In each
office note, your doctor may write down how you reported
feeling, his impressions as to the intensity of symptoms,
the onset of new symptoms and your state of mind. 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.
You are responsible for making sure
that your doctor’s notes are complete and helpful to your
case. Notes that document your illness and your treatment
often will not be enough.
Remember that Social Security
focuses on work activity limitations. Often, there is
nothing in medical records about how much you can lift,
how much you can carry, or how long you can sit - unless
you make it your business to tell your doctor about these
problems.
You should also tell your doctor
about pain - the chest pain or angina common in heart
patients that interferes with concentration, or causes
irritability that might cause tension with co-workers. If
your treating physician is not a specialist, he may not
note in detail some of the symptoms experienced by
diabetes patients - such as visual problems, numbness and
tingling, or even depression.
A Social Security adjudicator would
not give doctors’ notes a second look if they do not
address work activity limitations. Even an experienced
Social Security Judge will not presume to guess about
specific work limitations from doctors’ notes that only
deal with medical issues. 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
An attorney or claims representative
would approach your case by studying your medical record,
then creating a checklist form (called a "functional
capacity" form) that tracks most of your symptoms. These
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. Experienced representatives should know
which vocational factors carry the most weight with Judges
in a particular hearing office.
For example, a pain limitation 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 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.
Special Problems in Cardiac Cases
Heart disease presents special
problems in a Social Security case. As noted above, some
judges are very hesitant to find that a claimant meets a
"listing" unless the claimant is has significant heart
muscle damage or has extensive blockage in the blood
vessels leading to the heart. Recognize that heart disease
of some sort is very common in the population at large and
that as debilitated as you may be with your condition,
there is probably someone else out there with worse
symptoms.
Cardiac symptoms are also affected
by many outside factors, including the weather, your
stress level and other medications you may be taking.
Therefore, it is extremely important that you provide your
doctor with an accurate and complete list of symptoms.
One of the biggest issues seen has
to do with the onset of new symptoms. Remember, the first
two levels of appeal (the initial application and the
reconsideration) may take a year to work through the
system. By the time you get to Court, you may have been
waiting 18 months. As you know, heart disease is a
condition that can produce different symptoms at different
times. If you wait until the hearing request to allege
symptoms that were not identified in your initial
application, the Judge may delay your case further by
sending you to one or more consultative examinations
(independent medical exams) with Social Security approved
specialists. This is especially true if you have developed
significant depression after you filed your application.
You can help your case and your
lawyer by keeping copies of all the forms and applications
you completed for Social Security. If you have, in fact,
developed new symptoms, your representative can update
your file early enough so that any consultative exams can
be scheduled well in advance of your hearing - thus
reducing any more delay.
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.
Occasionally, you will find a doctor
who "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.
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.
Preparing your Case File for a Hearing
Would you be surprised to know that
most doctor’s notes are handwritten and difficult to read?
In several instances, your representative will have 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 your
lawyer or claim’s representative’s role as one whereby he
"translates" medical findings into work limitations.
How You Should Prepare for your Hearing
When your case has been denied at
the initial and at the reconsideration levels, your next
level of appeal is to request a hearing. Statistics show
that claimants have a much better chance of success with a
lawyer or representative at the hearing. Legal
representatives almost always accept Social Security cases
under a contingency fee arrangement, meaning that there
are no up front fees and your representative gets paid
only if he wins your case.
At a minimum, you can expect your
representative to perform the following:
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.
Help you 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.
Summary:
Heart disease is a common medical condition and Social
Security adjudicators and judges see cardiac cases
frequently. You can make your case stand out by reporting
to your doctor about symptoms and limitations that would
make it difficult for you to work. Common "work activity"
limitations for heart patients include shortness of
breath, chest pain, lack of blood flow to the extremities
(cold or "blue" hands and feet), depression, water
retention, vascular complications, headaches, fainting
spells, depression, anxiety and fatigue.
Do not exaggerate your symptoms but
report them consistently and follow your doctor’s
treatment recommendations. You want the Social Security
decision maker to conclude that you experience significant
work activity limitations despite your best efforts to
follow your doctor’s treatment regimen.
About Jonathan Ginsberg -
Jonathan is a practicing Social Security attorney in
Atlanta, Georgia, and he is the publisher of two "how
to" Social Security help books - the Disability
Answer Guide (how to fill out adult Social
Security disability forms) and the Child SSI Guide
(how to fill out child
Social Security disability forms). His comments
and opinions about "Tips for Winning a Heart Disease
Disability Case" should not be considered legal
advice as every Social Security disability case is
different and depends on your individual case
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