Guest guest Posted August 21, 2003 Report Share Posted August 21, 2003 I just HAD to add my two cents about SSDI. In the state of Kentucky, the average Disabilty Determiner makes $7.50 an hour and is not required to have any medical training. KY rejects 90% of those who apply for SSDI within 90 days of their application. Apparently, the thought process is that this across the board denial will " weed out " the greedy people who don't really " need " disability. In Dec of 2000, my husband, Kurt and I took our two preschool children on a vintage Christmas train ride at a local railroad museum. Kurt slipped on a wet steel step while exiting the ride, carrying our 2 year old son. As he fell, he flipped himself in mid-air to protect our son, and ended up breaking 6 ribs, damaging his left kidney, and basically " blowing up " his pancreas. The trauma casued a partial pancreatic ductal stricture, and recurrent pancreatic pseudocyst formation. We went from being an upper middle class family to a family on food stamps with a medical card. (Our children were two-and-a-half, and SEVEN WEEKS old at the time.) We filed for SSDI as soon as we could in Oct 2001. Kurt was/is so " damaged " from the accident that I stay home full time to care for him and our children. We hand-carried 1000 pages of medical records. cross-referenced and tabbed, to the Social Security Office. On Jan 9, 2002, we received a letter denying his coverage, stating that " while he has diabetes, he is not blind " WHAT????? First, traumatic pancreatic injury doesn't cause TRUE diabetes, because he still has intermittent pancreatic function. (Blood sugars all over the place, regardless of what he eats) Secondly, they ignored EVERYTHING else...the ductal stricture, the pseudocysts (some more than 12 cm in diameter), the damage to the kidney, etc, etc, etc. When I called, the examiner I talked to couldn't even pronounce GASTROENTEROLOGIST, but informed me that the " state didn't have one on staff. " Long story short, I went all the way to the Governors office to get it approved. It's unbelievable! I actually had someone in state govenment that is supposed to assist residents tell me that we should " Take Welfare and be grateful " . BLEAH! Jeanette Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 22, 2003 Report Share Posted August 22, 2003 Jeanette, A story like that leaves me numb and without words, and shaking my head in disbelief. I'm happy for your perseverence, but it should NOT have to be necessary in a case like your husband's. Thank you for sharing with us. With hope and prayers, Heidi Heidi H. Griffeth South Carolina SC & SE Regional Rep. PAI, Intl. Note: All comments and advice are personal opinion only, and should not be substituted for professional medical consultation. " What les behind us and what lies before us are tiny matters compared to what lies within us. " - Ralph Waldo Emerson Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.