SSA Announces 13 New Compassionate Allowances Conditions Involving the Immune System and Neurological Disorders
Michael J. Astrue, Commissioner of Social Security, today announced 13 new Compassionate Allowances conditions involving the immune system and neurological disorders. The Compassionate Allowances initiative identifies claims where the nature of the applicant’s disease or condition clearly meets the statutory standard for disability. Social Security states that with the help of sophisticated new information technology, the agency can quickly identify potential Compassionate Allowances and then quickly make decisions. This makes me wonder if this “sophisticated new information technology” is what was discussed in an Indianapolis Star article that I previously reported here. Added to the list are the following:
Malignant Multiple Sclerosis
Paraneoplastic Pemphigus
Multicentric Castleman Disease
Pulmonary Kaposi Sarcoma
Primary Central Nervous System Lymphoma
Primary Effusion Lymphoma
Angelman Syndrome
Lewy Body Dementia
Lowe Syndrome
Corticobasal Degeneration
Multiple System Atrophy
Progressive Supranuclear Palsy
The ALS/Parkinsonism Dementia Complex
The agency announced a small grant program for graduate students that will help Social Security improve its list and has recently awarded an approximately $1.8 million grant over a five-year period to Policy Research, Incorporated (PRI) through the Disability Determination Process Small Grant Program. This new program aims to improve the disability process through innovative research by graduate students who will receive small stipends for their work. In addition, the agency recently streamlined its online disability application for people who have a condition on the Compassionate Allowances list.
Information about prior announcements may be found in the archives of out blog. For a complete list of all of the compassionate allowance conditions, please clickhere.
Social Security Announces New Compassionate Allowances Conditions
Michael J. Astrue, Commissioner of Social Security, today announced 12 additional Compassionate Allowances conditions involving severe heart diseases, bringing the total number of conditions in the expedited disability process to 100. Compassionate Allowances are a way to quickly identify diseases and other medical conditions that, by definition, meet Social Security’s standards for disability benefits. These conditions primarily include certain cancers, adult brain disorders, and a number of rare disorders that affect children. According to Social Security, the idea is to fast track those cases for quick processing.
The Commissioner announced in October 2008 the first list of 50 conditions which I reported here. In February 2012, the list was expanded with 38 additional conditions, which are reported here.
The 12 new heart conditions that qualify for Compassionate Allowances are:
Aortic Atresia
Left Ventricular Assist Device (LVAD) Recipient
Eisenmenger Syndrome
Mitral Valve Atresia
Endomyocardial Fibrosis
Primary Cardiac Amyloidosis
Heart Transplant Graft Failure
Pulmonary Atresia
Heart Transplant Wait List – 1A/1B
Single Ventricle
Hypoplastic Left Heart Syndrome
Tricuspid Atresia
If you suffer from any of the 100 conditions, when you apply, or if your case is currently being reviewed, you should point out your condition and that it is on the list of Compassionate Allowances Conditions.
Processing Time at Indianapolis ODAR Falls Again!
Processing time at the Indianapolis Office of Disability Adjudication and Review has fallen again. As reported elsewhere on this site, in November 2009, the number of days from the filing of a Request for Hearing until the case was completed at the hearing site averaged 579 days. In April of 2009, it was 738 days and in June of 2008 it was 896 days. As of March 26, 2010, the number of days from the Request for Hearing for average processing at the Indianapolis ODAR was 534 days. As of February 1, 2011, average processing time had fallen to 505 days. Progress continues to be made!
In Fort Wayne, as of February 1, 2011, average processing time had fallen to 411 days. Evansville is at 318 days, and the recently opened Valparaiso office is at 285 days.
Book Launching Party
The author of Winning Your Disability Claim By The Rules, Tom S. Ebbinghouse,

will be available to personally autograph his latest book during the book launching party October 5th, 2010 from 3:00 p.m. to 7:00 p.m.at 320 N. Meridian Street, Suite 906, Indianapolis, IN 46204. Please stop by and join the fun! Click here for information as to where the office is located.
Winning Your Disability Claim By The Rules is a book written in plain English to inform you about Social Security disability and the long process that will be used to decide if you will collect your benefits. In this book Tom S. Ebbinghouse will begin to coach you so that you can be prepared and do your best in the biggest game of your life-the Social Security Disability Game.
“Do not be lulled into thinking that all you have to do is apply for your benefits and Social Security will help you collect what you deserve. Approximately 65% of those who apply are immediately turned down and approximately 93% are denied on their first appeal. You need to increase your odds of winning!”-Tom S. Ebbinghouse
Don’t take Social Security’s rules lightly. If you know them, they will help you succeed throughout the process of applying, appealing and winning your benefits. This book will reshape your thinking about what you need to do to win your benefits.
Success is totally up to you. If you want to win your disability benefits you worked for and deserve, Winning Your Disability Claim By The Rules will point you in the right direction.
SSA To Use Computers to Analyze Disability Claims In Indiana
The Indianapolis Star reports that Kia Green, a spokeswoman for Social Security, has stated that Social Security will use computers to perform an “intelligent analysis” of medical records that it receives through the Indiana Network for Patient Care (INPC) that is operated by The Regenstrief Institute. I reported the original press release about what The Regenstrief Institute is doing here. The original press release from Social Security did not mention that as the medical records are transferred from the Indiana Network for Patient Care that SSA’s computers would perform the “intelligent analysis” of the medical records. According to The Indianapolis Star article, if the system deems the information significant, it sends an alert to the decision makers reviewing the file. For example, if the medical file of a patient with end-stage renal disease shows the person is undergoing dialysis, an alert goes out. It would be interesting to see what the computers are searching for, what SSA has determined merits an alert, and what kind of reports the system generates.
Happy Memorial Day
We wish you a very Happy Memorial Day. Please remember why we have this day as a holiday. On Saturday the 500 festival parade had a float in honor of all veterans and military heroes. The vets on the float seemed to appreciate the standing ovation they received. The crowd rose to its feet each time an American flag went by. Many men remembered to remove their hats. If you see a vet, please remember to thank them for their service to our country.
Processing Time for Indianapolis Social Security Disability Hearings Falls Again!
The processing time for Indianapolis Social Security Disability Hearings at the Office of Adjudication and Review (ODAR) has fallen again. As reported elsewhere on this site, in November 2009, the number of days from the filing of a Request for Hearing until the case was completed at the hearing site averaged 579 days. In April of 2009, it was 738 days and in June of 2008 it was 896 days. As of March 26, 2010, the number of days from the Request for Hearing for average processing at the Indianapolis ODAR was 534 days. The Indianapolis office now ranks 130 out of 144 hearing offices. Processing time for Evansville Indiana (rank 86) is now at 460 days and Ft. Wayne Indiana (ranked 115) is at 509 days.
If you check in the archives of this site for the other postings for processing time, you will be able to see the other rankings for past times. Indianapolis has improved so that it no longer hovers in last or next to last place, and it has not for many months now. Be sure you check out the Archives for postings on many different issues connected to a Social Security Disability claim or you are not getting the full benefit from this site!
Another Reason You May Be Denied Your Social Security Disability Benefits
Most people who are turned down for Social Security Disability Benefits cannot believe that they were turned down when they applied for benefits. They do not realize that in Indiana approximately 65% will be turned down when they first apply. They just cannot believe the SSA would get such an important decision wrong.
When you apply for disability, your claim is sent to a state agency that SSA hires to made the medical determination of whether you are disabled. In many states this is called the Disability Determination Service, DDS, while in Indiana the current name is the Disability Determination Bureau, DDB. It is these State workers that decide your claim.
The National Association of Disability Examiners, NADE, describes itself as:
a professional association whose purpose is to promote the art and science of disability evaluation. The majority of our members work in the state Disability Determination Service (DDS) agencies where 15,000+ employees adjudicate claims for Social Security and/or Supplemental Security Income (SSI) disability benefits. As such, our members constitute the “front lines” of disability evaluation.
A recent issue of The NADE Advocate, Volume 26, Number 1, provides insight into why SSA may make the wrong decision in your case.
The growing complexity of the Social Security and SSI Disability Programs, coupled with the need to produce a huge volume of work, justifies even more the need for adequate resources in order to provide the service that the American public has come to expect and deserve from SSA. It takes an average of two years for a newly hired disability examiner to become fully trained and proficient to the point they can function independently and contribute to the process of making timely and accurate disability decisions. Thus, decisions not to replace productive personnel when they leave can take two or more years to correct even after new hires are made. NADE has long maintained that it is critical for SSA to be provided with the resources needed to hire and train new staff that can perform these duties. Low salaries, hiring restrictions and the stress of the job have contributed to high attrition (12.3%) in the DDSs. (Emphasis added)
Constantly having to replace 12.3% of the workforce and it taking two years before they can function independently, plus the stress of the job to get the work out fast, combined with low pay, may be a reason that DDB makes the wrong decision so many times.
The important point for you is that you should not be discouraged when your claim is turned down at the initial or reconsideration stages. With approximately 65% turned down on initial application and approximately 93% turned down at Reconsideration, you should take the steps necessary to increase your odds of winning. You will need an experienced attorney in Social Security claims to help you increase your odds in what NADE calls a “growing complexity of the Social Security and SSI Disability Programs.”
Unlike many attorneys, I will begin to help you with your case before your file your claim. Read When Should I Hire An Attorney For My Disability Case? for my reasons why. What are you doing to increase your odds of winning?

