Baby Boomers
Baby Boomer Memories
Baby Boomer Books for Baby Boomers
Baby Boomer Articles for Baby Boomers
Baby Boomer Finances for Baby Boomers
Baby Boom Stories for Baby Baoomers
Baby Boomer Music for Baby Boomers
Baby Boomer Traval for Baby Boomers
Baby Boomer Movies for Baby Boomers
Baby Boomer TV for Baby Boomers
Baby Boomer Links for Baby Boomers

ARTICLES

The Beach Boys

Lovin' Spoonful

Information Sites for Boomers and Seniors

What to Buy Grandma

Caregiver Burnout: Ten Coping Tips

The Prentenders

Proposed Tax Reform Affects Retirement

The Best Years of Their Lives

Early Distributions From Retirement Plans

The Right Mutual Funds For Baby Boomers

Jerry Garcia

Five Ways To Boost Your Retirement Income

Embracing Menopause, Path to Peace & Power

Paul Anka

Oldies Radio Stations

Carlos Santana

Flashback to the 50's

The Animals

The Drifters - Then And Where Are They Now

Baby Boomer Golden Oldies Singers and Bands

Golden Oldies Music Songs

Baby Boomer Golden Oldies Music Looking Back

The Escorts

The Oldies? Nostalgia? Watchyacallit?
K.L.O.D Radio the oldies station

Elvis

Frankie Avalon, Bobby Darin, Fabian, Ricky Nelson, Paul Anka, Robby Rydell

Golden Oldies Music Bob Dylan

Golden Oldies Music

Rare Music Memorabilia Site Launched

Your Guide To Retirement Planning

Promensil Sponsors America’s First 'Baby Boomer' Pageant

House Sitting Takes Retired Canadian Around the World

Baby Boomer Retirement Self Directed IRA Retirement Funds Real Estate

Baby Boomer Retirement Golden Years Working

The Baby Boomer’s Bible to Life After 50 Reveals the Essential Truths About Aging

Time Capsule for Baby Boomers

Costa Rica Living & Retirement Tips

Wake Up Baby Boomers – There’s Still Time

Travel Safety In Mexico

Baby Boomer Retirement

Baby Boomer Music

The Baby Boomer Athlete

The Right Mutual Funds For Baby Boomers

Revitalizing The Power of the Baby Boomers

Baby Boomers as Alzheimer's Care Givers

Reverse Mortgages: Information You Need to Know

Five Things To Do Before Placing Your Loved One In A Nursing Home

Baby Boomer's Survival Guide: When Your Life Goes Boom

In Most Cases, Medicare is Still A Distant Second to the Safe, Reliable Canadian Alternative, Says DoctorSolve

The Baby Boomer's Anti-Aging Program

Buying Drugs from Canada Now Comes with a New Level of Safety Assurance, says DoctorSolve Internet Pharmacy Service - Press Release

Reverse Mortgages: Information You Need to Know

Retire Nova Scotia Canada

Getting Older, Getting Better

Western US Retirement Picks

Retirement Radio Show - Press Release

Lighting Up a Seniors Life - Baby Boomer Alert!

Best Places to Retire

Your Choice: Aging Boomer or Ageless Bloomer

Retirees Are Fulfilling Travel Dreams Through House Sitting

Homebase Abroad Offers Exclusive Umbria and Tuscany Villa Rentals

Radical Retirement Communities-Bali

Surprising Impact OF Viagra On Love And Relationships

Baby Boomers -- Now Shredding The Rules for Retirement

Dealing Effectively with Midlife Issues

Wake Up Baby Boomers – There’s Still Time

Boomer Orphans

The Bad Wine That Made A 'Ripple' In Our Culture

Baby Boomers: Will They Be Able to Afford Their Parents?

A Look Back At The Sixties 60's For Baby Boomers

The Baby Boomer Athlete

Blooming Boomers - Women and Retirement

Getting Older, Getting Better

NURSING HOME SITE - ADULT RETIREMENT COMMUNITIES SITE

Active Baby Boomers

Does Your Government Really Care if You Become Disabled and Need Benefit Assistance?
by Tim Moore

Does your government really care if you are disabled? That's a question that is becoming more and worthy of the public's consideration.

Recently, I was on the phone with a disability claimant who needs to have his reconsideration filed and I asked him if he had been seen by any doctors recently. He gave the all too common answer: "No, I haven't been able to go. My insurance ran out a long time ago".

This is a very common situation. And I've heard it so much that I've become somewhat desensitived to it. But...if you really think about it, these situations (which ARE extremely common) are horrendous.

 

Let me put on my examiner/caseworker hat for a moment. The disability system is set up so that the prospect of being approved for disability weighs entirely on a claimants medical records. And not just on medical records, but on recent records (aside from closed periods).

Well, ding ding ding (wake up bureaucrats, politicians, and red-tape functionaries), if the process for eventually---we hope---getting approved for disability benefits can take up to 3 years (I'm not pulling that number out of a rabbit hat either----just call any attorney or non attorney practicing in the raleigh north carolina area and they will sullenly confirm this information), then how can a claimant be expected to have decent medical record documentation by the time they get to a hearing (a destination most cases will arrive at)?

 

Answer: an unacceptably large percentage of claimants won't (I typically tell people to seek out a county health department, free clinic, or even go the ER, if need be---but's let be honest, that doesn't take the place of records generated via an ongoing treating physician relationship).

Now, before I go on any further, I acknowledge the notion that the disability system is not responsible in any way, shape, or form for facilitating a claimant's access to medical care while a case is pending in order to substantiate a claim (i.e. ensure that records are in place to support allegations of disability). But, even for those claimants who had mainstream employer-provided health insurance, COBRA only lasts 18 months.

So, when the process can last 2 or 3 years, where does that leave claimants? In a bad way, without a doubt. Not only are they put in the position of finding it difficult to document their impairments----to add insult to injury their conditions will sometimes worsen as a result of having inadquate access to medical care.

Now, back to the headline of this post. THESE HUGE WAIT TIMES came into effect under the administration currently sitting in office. So, do they care? Do they really care about those who are least able to assist themselves?

I would have to say no. They do not.

I will leave you with this anecdote: about 2 years ago I tried to assist one particular claimant whose situation was quite miserable. He had no access to medical care and his living conditions were beyond the pale. To try to help him, I contacted the following agencies in his city (not my own area of operation): the salvation army, catholic social ministries, and urban ministries.

Want to know what I was told? They were out of funds. THIS WAS IN FEBRUARY OF THAT YEAR.

So, what does that say about the federal administration's notions of faith-based charities taking up the slack from the government cutting back: that it is essentially useless and disingenuous rhetoric.

In addition to being a former disability examiner, I used to be a food stamp caseworker, medicaid caseworker, and an afdc worker, and I can tell you unequivocally that private charities will never be able to fill any gap left behind by the feds, but that's another conversation.

Now, why this article? Because there are changes in the works that while masquerading as reform of the social security disability system...will actually make the system more hostile to disabled benefit applicants.

Chew on this as a parting thought. The people who are trying to "reform" social security disability are the same people who tried to (or are trying to, as the case may be):

1. bust the federal employees unions (and have to some extent succeeded),

2. altered regulations regarding overtime compensation in a way that was clearly hostile to workers,

3. are trying to limit the ability of mesothelioma victims to seek compensation (the sick part part about this is that mesothelioma has an incubation period of up to 40 years following exposure to asbestos fibers and the diagnosis itself is a literal death sentence----no one survives, even following a pneumonectomy).

And these are just a few things.

So, to address the question we began with: does your government really care if you become disabled and need immediate benefit assistance to avoid falling into a financial abyss? Perhaps to some extent...but, unfortunately, I would have to say, not particularly much.


About the Author
The author of this article is Timothy Moore, who, in addition to being a former food stamp caseworker, medicaid caseworker and AFDC caseworker, is a former disability claims examiner. He publishes information at Social Security Disability Tips and Secrets which features a helpful and informative Social Security Disability faq