When the topic of Social Security disability benefits is discussed there are many misconceptions and flat out false information that is spread. Some people claim that only lazy people who do not want to work apply for Social Security disability benefits, but this could not be further from the truth.
The vast majority of Social Security disability recipients and claimants spend many years working to be eligible for disability benefits if something should happen to them where they could not maintain full-time employment. Every day Americans suffer from accidents or injuries that make full-time employment impossible and many others are diagnosed with a condition that prevents them from continuing to work. Below are some facts directly from Social Security about disability benefits. These facts set the record straight about all the false information spread about the program.
Earning Credits From Work
Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI) is a social insurance program under which workers earn coverage for benefits, by working and paying Social Security taxes on their earnings. The program provides benefits to disabled workers and to their dependents. For those who can no longer work due to a disability, our disability program is there to replace some of their lost income.
It Is Difficult To Qualify For Benefits
Eligibility rules for Social Security’s disability program differ from those of private plans or other government agencies. Social Security doesn’t provide temporary or partial disability benefits, like workers’ compensation or veterans’ benefits do.
To receive disability benefits, a person must meet the definition of disability under the Social Security Act (Act). A person is disabled under the Act if they can’t work due to a severe medical condition that has lasted, or is expected to last, at least one year or result in death. The person’s medical condition(s) must prevent them from doing work that they did in the past, and it must prevent them from adjusting to other work.
Because the Act defines disability so strictly, Social Security disability beneficiaries are among the most severely impaired in the country. In fact, Social Security disability beneficiaries are more than three times as likely to die in a year as other people the same age. Among those who start receiving disability benefits at the age of 55, 1-in-6 men and 1-in-8 women die within five years of the onset of their disabilities.
It Happens To More People Than You Think
Disability is something many Americans, especially younger people, think can only affect the lives of other people. Tragically, thousands of young people are seriously injured or killed, often as the result of traumatic events. Many serious medical conditions, such as cancer or mental illness, can affect the young as well as the elderly. The sobering fact for 20-year-olds is that more than 1-in-4 of them becomes disabled before reaching retirement age. As a result, they may need to rely on the Social Security disability benefits for income support. Our disability benefits provide a critical source of financial support to people when they need it most.