Reflex Sympathetic Dystrophy (RSD and CRPS) Reflex Sympathetic Dystrophy (Complex Regional Pain Syndromes Type I) and Causalgia (Complex Regional Pain Syndromes Type II)(RSD and CRPS)


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Old 03-30-2009, 04:36 AM #11
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Default Thanks!!!

Hi Finz,

Thank you very much for the information. I will print it out and hold onto it should we ever need to investigate this further.

Have a wonderful day!!!

Jeanne
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Old 03-30-2009, 06:52 AM #12
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Default Ssd

I am having a bad experience with this situation in my state of VA. I have a lawyer, but she does not know my disease so my next step is I have to get my hands tested to see if I can work with my hands. I have been waiting on a hearing DATE since August 27, 2008. I have already had carpel tunnel releases on both hands and one wrist I shattered and is full of screws and pins. I should use a cane around the house but it kills my hands. Since I am going to school online I have to prove I can't work with my hands, so what does that have to do that I can't drive across my mountain everyday, and when I went on FMLA I was already on a light duty job that I could not do I went to my primary Dr. for new pain thinking I have RSD in my bones, he told me that I probably have fibromyalgia and to take that up with the pain center, I looked it up and that would explain a lot of my extra pain, I go there on the 8th of April. I have heard different stories from different states, but unless you have COPD in VA it takes a min. of two years, mine will be up in August but with a lawyer that knows nothing about my disease how can she efficiantly do a good job Anyway this is a tender subject for me as I am pretty ****** off My advice is find some people who have filed in your state because I have heard stories of "right away" and one lady I talked to in WA waited 10 years. Hope this helps
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Old 03-30-2009, 01:40 PM #13
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tjbird, couldn't you provide your lawyer with educational materials on RSD from well-known support groups like RSDS.org?
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Old 03-30-2009, 02:23 PM #14
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Default It's all about proper medical documentation

If you're in the process of either getting on or switching things over in regards to Social Security Disability, then be forewarned, it's all about how well your doctors are documenting your current health situation.

On an average, most people applying for SSD take anywhere from 1 year all the way up to 2. If the doctor has perfectly documented the severity of your health problems, it is possible to get SSD through in 90 days. I know, that's how long mine took when I applied.

RSD is a rather difficult disabilty to get rated on. Because there are so many different types and situations, Social Security knows that in many cases it's just a matter of time till things either get better or it goes away altogether. For people like you who are getting worse, then Social Security is needing the time-line showing that you're still loosing ground. If there is additional problems such as circulation or blood clots, then that will scoot things through faster. Good luck, and hang on because tomorrow will get better so long as you took care of today. Bob.


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Originally Posted by eileen15565 View Post
can anyone provide any info about the process and chances of getting social security disability due to having RSD. I can't work and no longer have my profession due to RSD...
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Old 07-13-2009, 09:41 PM #15
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hi,
I am fairly new to this site - I received ssd 10/2008 - I had a w/c injury, had surgery on both elbows and woke after the second surgery not able to use entire rt arm/w/stiff fingers - I have not been able to use since 5/2008 - went on short term disability on my job into long term disability - I had w/c plus disability on my job so they did not want to pay the 60 % of my salary so they filed the paper work and insisted that i had to file ssd - by the time I filed, my rt hand had clawed - ss made an appt for me to see one of their md's after they received my medical records - I had a physical by them plus films and a few weeks later they approved me from the date of disability which was 4/2008 (first surgery - had to wait 5 mos as waiting period) even though I did not apply til 10/2008 so you get back pay from time of disability - I don't know if by my job filing paper work helped or not but my lawyer did not file for me - It was a blessing as I had no problems w/any of this, my job did not fight me or give me a hard time but acknowledged their part in my injury - hope this helps - by the way, I am from atlanta, not sure how different other states are-
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Old 07-14-2009, 08:53 AM #16
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Originally Posted by bobinjeffmo View Post
RSD is a rather difficult disabilty to get rated on. Because there are so many different types and situations, Social Security knows that in many cases it's just a matter of time till things either get better or it goes away altogether.
Is this true "in many cases it's just a matter of time till things either get better or it goes away altogether"? I've heard of people getting better and in some total remission, however, I'm hesitant to say I've read anywhere the numbers are in the "many", quite the opposite. Am I wrong in this? I hope I am.
My wife has had RSD since 2002 and is crippled from the desease. Her broken right arm has been in a brace for 6 years and has spread into her legs and back. She's been denied SSDI for 3 years, attorneys and a Congressman on board and still rejections here in Virginia. This was not a WC case, no lawsuits etc., just a simple fall and broken wrist. She's a college grad with a 25 year continuous work history.
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Old 07-14-2009, 06:17 PM #17
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Very few people achieve remission. There are few I've known who had lidocaine infusions and it beat back the rsd enough that they're working again full time but not in remission. They are still taking pain meds and other meds just not as many. Keith Orsini at RSD Hope had a round of HBOT that beat back his pain but I don't know how he's doing now. He quit posting to the blog he began on his HBOT treatments. Don't know whether the effects stayed with him or went away and he ended up as bad as he was to begin with.

As to the SSDI, I can't believe she can't get it! That's utter BS! RSD is on the list of "approved" disabilities and has been for a few years now. I don't understand why she isn't being approved. It's not like she can still walk around freely and they can look at her and say, "Oh, she can still walk and move fine so therefore she can work." *rolls eyes* They would say that about me if I even qualified but since I don't it doesn't matter. I look quite "normal." lol I'll keep her and you in my thoughts that you get "justice" soon!!

Hugs,

Karen
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Old 07-15-2009, 08:46 AM #18
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Originally Posted by GalenaFaolan View Post
Very few people achieve remission. There are few I've known who had lidocaine infusions and it beat back the rsd enough that they're working again full time but not in remission. They are still taking pain meds and other meds just not as many. Keith Orsini at RSD Hope had a round of HBOT that beat back his pain but I don't know how he's doing now. He quit posting to the blog he began on his HBOT treatments. Don't know whether the effects stayed with him or went away and he ended up as bad as he was to begin with.

As to the SSDI, I can't believe she can't get it! That's utter BS! RSD is on the list of "approved" disabilities and has been for a few years now. I don't understand why she isn't being approved. It's not like she can still walk around freely and they can look at her and say, "Oh, she can still walk and move fine so therefore she can work." *rolls eyes* They would say that about me if I even qualified but since I don't it doesn't matter. I look quite "normal." lol I'll keep her and you in my thoughts that you get "justice" soon!!

Hugs,

Karen
I think it is because of a few reasons. One, my wife has not been in front of a judge yet. This is our goal to get a hearing in front of a judge, not a kid who is on auto pilot and rejects out of hand, this is how my wife's lawyer put it. Two, I think Virginia is one state that it is more difficult to receive because it is in a region loaded with folks trying to receive SSDI, mid atlantic issue. Three, I'm not sure what records these SS people are viewing. My fear is that these records are incomplete and harken back to those 4 years my wife worked everyday in severe pain until she was fired, because of a lack of treatment from her doctors at the time using four different insurance companies over those many years. It was her doctor's refusal to sign a two year disability paper that clinched her termination. It was only after she was fired from her job at a very large company and when I picked up insurance at my employment to cover her that she received immediate, good treatment overnight using different doctors. There is no doubt that this company wanted her gone. She worked for them nearly 15 years, she told them she was diagnosed with RSD and when she did they increased her work load both administratively and volunteered her to help move office equipment and or anything that would put her thru pain. Complaints to HR made things worse.
All the letters of rejection from SS state that they realize she has RSD but that should not stop her from working. So my hunch is something is in those records and most likely from bad doctors from the past. Her next appeal is going to be in front of a judge in the next year. Our lawyer has stated that she will receive those records for us to view several months before the hearing.
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Old 07-15-2009, 11:00 AM #19
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I too was lucky to recieve SS disability on my own and on 1st try. All of the advice above is valid esp in how you describe your pain limitations etc. I am also sure that my age was a factor-was 59 at time of filing. Get all of the help that you need in these forums-YOU deserve the S S !!
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Old 07-15-2009, 06:29 PM #20
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I sounds as if that may be the root of the problem Jimking. The wc docs were writing idiotic stuff in my records because wc told them to and if I had qualified for SSDI I think it would have prevented me from getting it too. You won't know until you read those records but I believe you are right in thinking there is something there.

Hugs,

Karen
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