I have degenerative disc disease throughout my entire spine, multiple disc herniations in all 3 spinal segments, right leg hemiparesis from unknown cause, spasticity, ankle clonus, major depressive disorder/anxiety. I regularly stumble, "wall walk", and use a cane. The rx I take cause blurred vision, insomnia, fatigue. I can't drive, and I can't take public transport because I can't walk to/from the station. I have an acquaintance who lost his ring finger in a work related injury who was accepted for SSDI on the first try so I figured with my medical problems I'd have no problem...EHHHH WRONG!!!! I was denied! I was told that I would be considered disabled only if I could no longer perform ANY type of work and since I had use of my hands I could still work. I can't understand how one finger being amputated (he can still drive, shop, work on his house, etc) qualifies as disabled while me (in pain, unable to get around, med side affects, etc), I was told that I could still perform a sedentary job with my hands. What the H--L?! My acquaintance could deliver mail, do construction, drive a bus, work in a grocery for pete's sake! Not that I want to take away his benefits, I just can't understand why I was denied. I'm appealing with the help of a lawyer and hoping i'll win. My lawyer told me she wished people would go to her BEFORE applying the first time because SS reads what they want to into the info/answers supplied on the application and will twist it to their benefit. For instance, they ask about your previous jobs. She said they don't care about the job description you provide, they only take the title. So if your company gives you a title that doesn't truly match what you actually do, make up a title that DOES match what you do. If you list the "company's title" on your SS app you're screwed! They'll consider you to have a higher education/job qualification because their file of job descriptions for that title says so regardless of what you say. Hope this info helps others. Get yourself a good lawyer, some will work for a percentage of your retro benefits so you don't have to come up money.
I honestly believe it depends on where you apply, I received ssdi the very first time i applied for it, I developed asthma about 4 yrs ago, I have been hospitalized 26 times the last 3 and a half years, I still have a few doctors say it's not to bad, but being hospitalized that many times is scary as hell, I stopped working a few years ago, so they only backdated it from 2010...I applied in Montana...it took about 5 months for it to get approved..
Welcome, sorry you're having such a rough time. I think they make it their jobs to do everything they can for people who are disabled give up.
Finally after 2 years of fighting SSA I found a good attorney who is willing to fight for me and gave me a lot of great advice and tips on dealing with things and even told me get yourself to a psych dr dealing with all your health issues.
SSA doesn't look at the conditions as much as how much they disable you on a daily basis. So if you haven't you should write down symptoms of each condition you have and daily write down how they hinder your life and keep a log of them.
don't give up; you worked for those benefits and it may take some time but keep searching for someone to help you. I know Binder & Binder and Allsup are disability advocates and supposed to do great work but I went with a local attorney since I have a difficult case and needed someone who knew disability law.
hang in there and keep us posted =)