ahimsa
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
Washington Post - Covid long-haulers face grueling fights for disability benefits
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Article mentions ME/CFS, but unlike other Washington Post articles it uses the term "chronic fatigue syndrome." At least it's not "chronic fatigue."
Those of us who have been through the process of applying for disability benefits know that it's a brutal process -- and not only for patients with an ME/CFS diagnosis. It's going to be a rude awakening for so many Long Covid patients.
SSA is understaffed and underfunded. The process for getting benefits is designed to turn people down and hope they give up or die (seriously, a certain percent die while waiting for benefits). It's designed with the idea that there are a whole lot of malingering patients trying to game the system and you have to weed them out.
And getting SSDI (social security disability insurance) benefits is a piece of cake compared to disability benefits covered by ERISA law, but that's another story.
I noticed another weird item in their story about a patient applying for SSDI:
"She continued to submit additional test results after her initial application, with what she said was medical proof of 12 different diagnoses, including post-exertion malaise, chronic fatigue syndrome, dysautonomia, small fiber neuropathy, irritable bowel syndrome, and anxiety and depression."
When did PEM become a diagnosis?
(gift link - no paywall for 14 days)
Article mentions ME/CFS, but unlike other Washington Post articles it uses the term "chronic fatigue syndrome." At least it's not "chronic fatigue."
Patients and doctors say safety net is unprepared for novel claims stemming from the pandemic
Doctors said in interviews they are treating long covid patients who are clearly too sick to work but who have difficulty meeting the evidence threshold insurers demand: objective medical test results showing an inability to perform work.
...
The challenges are similar to those faced for years by people claiming disabilities based on chronic fatigue syndrome. But the pandemic has given rise to such claims on a far greater scale.
“We are seeing a mini epidemic of chronic fatigue syndrome,” said Benjamin Natelson, a neurologist at Mount Sinai Hospital in New York who specializes in such post-viral disorders.
Those of us who have been through the process of applying for disability benefits know that it's a brutal process -- and not only for patients with an ME/CFS diagnosis. It's going to be a rude awakening for so many Long Covid patients.
SSA is understaffed and underfunded. The process for getting benefits is designed to turn people down and hope they give up or die (seriously, a certain percent die while waiting for benefits). It's designed with the idea that there are a whole lot of malingering patients trying to game the system and you have to weed them out.
And getting SSDI (social security disability insurance) benefits is a piece of cake compared to disability benefits covered by ERISA law, but that's another story.
I noticed another weird item in their story about a patient applying for SSDI:
"She continued to submit additional test results after her initial application, with what she said was medical proof of 12 different diagnoses, including post-exertion malaise, chronic fatigue syndrome, dysautonomia, small fiber neuropathy, irritable bowel syndrome, and anxiety and depression."
When did PEM become a diagnosis?