You should apply for disability benefits as soon as you become disabled. It can take a long time to process an application for disability benefits (three to five months). To apply for disability benefits, you will need to complete an application for Social Security Benefits and the Disability Report. You can complete the Disability Report online at www.socialsecurity.gov/disability/index.htm. You can also print the Disability Report, complete it and return it to your local Social Security office. They may be able to process your application faster if you help them by getting any other information they need promptly. There is also a Disability Starter kit to at http://www.ssa.gov/disability/disability_starter_kits.htm.
The information they need includes:
- Your Social Security number;
- Your birth or baptismal certificate;
- Names, addresses, and phone numbers of the doctors, caseworkers, hospitals, and clinics that took care of you and dates of your visits;
- Names and dosage of all the medicine currently being used;
- Medical records from your doctors, therapists, hospitals, clinics, and caseworkers that you already have in your possession;
- Laboratory and test results;
- A summary of where you worked and the kind of work you did; and
- A copy of your most recent W-2 Form (Wage and Tax Statement) or, if you are self-employed, your federal tax return for the past year.
In addition to the basic application for disability benefits, there are other forms you will need to fill out. One form collects information about your medical condition and how it affects your ability to work. Other forms give doctors, hospitals, and other health care professionals who have treated you permission to send them information about your medical condition.
Do not delay applying for benefits if you cannot get all of this information together quickly. They will help you get it.
What If It's Not Alzheimer's
© 2003 by Lisa Radin and Gary Radin
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Chapter 21
Pages 283-302
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Association of Frontotemporal Dementia (Website) |
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Pick's Disease Support Group (Website) |
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University of California, San Francisco (Website) |
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Family Caregiver Alliance (Website) |
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National Institutes of Health (Website) |
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