Wednesday, October 23, 2024

Chronic Pain


     One of the most important factors causing disability is pain. That's inconvenient for Social Security. They like things that can be shown by a test. They want some foolproof way of measuring how bad some condition is. You may have noticed that there's no machine in your doctor's office to measure your pain. In fact if you think about it, pain is an intensely personal experience. No one else really can feel your pain. One thing I've noticed over the years is that people have a hard time describing their pain.

    Social Security's approach to pain is to pretend it doesn't exist. They routinely deny claims where the patient describes horrific pain. Social Security may acknowledge that a certain medical condition causes pain but they say, with some accuracy, that there's no clear relationship between the medical condition a person has and how much pain they suffer. That doesn't mean that a patient is fibbing  when he or she says they suffer great pain from a medical condition while others with the same medical problem complain of only mild pain. While it may look like the same medical condition, there may be subtle differences causing much worse pain for some patients. Pain is a complicated thing. It's well known that the perception of pain is worse for those who also suffer from depression or anxiety. The pain and the depression or anxiety is all processed in the brain. Wouldn't you expect some interaction between the two?

    Despite the problems, you certainly can be approved for Social Security disability benefits based upon chronic pain. That's actually almost routine. Cases based upon chronic pain get denied at the initial and reconsideration levels and then approved by an Administrative Law Judge. That doesn't happen every time but it happens a lot. Don't give up. Get help from a lawyer who knows Social Security.

If you're in NC and want help with your Social Security disability claim, call Hall & Rouse, P.C. at 1-866-425-5347

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Sounds like they need pain experts on their panel of doctors they claim they have. Pain is very real, and very real with multiple conditions. Chronic pain needs to be addressed by a specialist in that field. They pick up on cues that the claimant doesn't even know exist. Like doctors and spine issues, they KNOW it hurts, and they also know when someone is faking (to say like to get an auto insurance claim boosted). Doctors that are suspicious that the pain is being embellished will certainly say so to SSA or other organizations, including insurance companies if they doubt the claimant's honesty. The DDS certainly needs at least ONE pain specialist on their panel, if they don't already (but not one that has their lips sewn shut).

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