Minnesota Disability Benefits for Heart disease

Minnesota Disability Benefits for Heart disease

Disability for Heart disease Lawyer

Disability benefits for heart disease are available from the Social Security Administration if you are unable to work. Disability for heart disease can arise from multiple musculoskeletal disorders. Most heart disease in this area involves arthritis and other age-related degenerative disorders.

Many people also develop heart disease from traumatic injuries such as car accidents and work accidents. There are several important things to consider if you are applying or appealing a denial for disability benefits for heart disease in Minnesota.

Tips for Winning Heart disease Disability Benefits

1. Acceptable Documentation: The SSA only considers medically acceptable diagnosis and documentation from medical doctors and osteopaths (M.D.’s and D.O.’s). Records and reports from physical therapists, chiropractors, holistic healers, and nurses are considered in the SSA evaluation but are not enough to establish a claimant’s disability for heart disease without proper medical documentation.

2. Longitudinal Clinical Record: Social Security needs at least 3 months of treatment documentation of your heart disease. This is referred to as a “longitudinal clinical record”. Basically they are looking for evidence over a period of time that your heart disease disability is improving, worsening or unchanging.

3. Medical Tests: Medically acceptable tests are extremely helpful in establishing your heart disease disability. Findings on tests such as MRI’s and CT scans are considered objective signs (evidence) of abnormalities causing your heart problems.

Examples of imaging that the SSA considers acceptable include:

• electrocardiogram (ECG)
• magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)
• computed tomography (CT scan)
• exercise tolerance tests (ETT)
• chest x-ray

4. Loss of Function Evidence: This is a very important factor Social Security uses to determine your disability benefits for heart disease. Regardless of the cause of your heart disease impairment, functional loss refers to an inability to walk effectively on a sustained basis, or inability to perform fine and gross movements effectively on a sustained basis. The SSA is more concerned with how your heart disease affects and limits your ability to work rather than your particular heart disorder unless you meet one of the cardiovascular disease listing impairments.

Detailed information about your functional limitations is very helpful in documenting your disability for heart disease. This is an area that many claimants neglect and leads to denials for their case. Claimants should complete what are referred to as activities of daily living (ADL) forms.

Examples of these forms are SSA-3368 Disability Report and SSA-3369 Work History Report. The SSA will also consider letters and reports from family, friends and past co-workers that can verify limitations due to heart disease.

Fields Law heart disease disability attorneys will assist you in getting the medical tests you need to document your heart disease disability. If you are unable to work because of heart disease we can help you apply for social security benefits. If you have been denied disability benefits we can appeal your case.

We offer a Free case review. Our Minnesota disability lawyers understand how frustrating it is to have heart disease and be denied disability benefits when you are unable to work. There are never any fees unless we win your disability case.

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