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#21 | ||
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#22 | |||
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Co-Administrator
Community Support Team
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About the "If you can sit and type out long letters then you can work"....
![]() Often I stop/ save /re open a document and pick up again later as I need to. I love the computer for this. I'm sure many folks do the same thing. Even normal healthy folks. I suppose there is a way to have the edit times show, if "they " are assuming that a longer letter is typed in one sitting.
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#23 | ||
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I use to do that until lighting struck my house and fried everything, even with the $400 surge protector I had. So now I just copy to a disk. No worries. |
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#24 | ||
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Senior Member
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You said not to make it too long BECAUSE SSDI would think if you can type that much you could work |
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#25 | ||
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Senior Member
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I think it's a safe assumption that ANY pages of whining is too long. The SSDI application should be as long as it needs to be to get all of the necessary information accross. No more and no less. You did give advice about how long it should be, you cautioned people to make sure it's not 'too long' It needs to be as long as it needs to be. A SSDI application is not a legal brief. If someone asks for advice about legal briefs, that might be appropriate advice to give in that thread. |
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#26 | ||
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I've only said that 12 pages of whining was to long, but where did I specify how long to long is? If you want to make your application 300 pages long be my guest, I think this should be the end of it.
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#27 | ||
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Senior Member
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You cautioned not to make it too long BECAUSE then SSDI would think you could type that much all in one sitting. That is not good advice, IMHO |
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#28 | ||
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When an Examiner opens a newly assigned file and sees either disc herniation, back pain, lumbar problems, spinal stenosis, degenerative joint disease, degenerative disc disease, or the acronym DJD (which stands for degenerative joint disease) they begin to look for the following evidence (once they have in hand, of course, the records they've requested from a claimant's treatment sources): 1. Physician treatment notes indicating one of these diagnoses. 2. Objective evidence of disc deterioration such as xray reports, CAT scans, and MRI studies. |
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#29 | ||
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Senior Member
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The person submitting the claim would not fill those out. SSDI asks for medical records, doctor reports AND how the applicant feels their condition has disabled them.
When the person filing a claim has to fill out their forms, they should give complete answers and NOT feel they have to limit how much they write "because SSDI will think they can work if they write too much" as you said |
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#30 | ||
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