There are a variety of conditions, diseases
and impairments that may qualify a person for Social Security Disability
Insurance or Supplemental Security Income (“SSDI/SSI”) benefits. Cancers, orthopedic conditions, heart disease,
mental health issues, and autoimmune disorders are among the diagnoses that may
qualify an individual for these Federal benefits. What is important to
understand is that the Social Security Administration (“SSA”) is not as
concerned with the diagnosis itself as they are with the limitations that an
impairment may impose on an individual’s ability to work. Certain impairments,
like lower extremity joint disorders, require SSA to look at a person’s ability
to “ambulate effectively” when assessing disability. SSA defines effective
ambulation in specific terms.
To order to ambulate or walk effectively,
an individual must be able to walk without a hand-held device that would
prevent an individual from using at least one upper extremity to carry items.
For example, a person must use his/her hands to operate a walker or a manual wheelchair.
Thus, a person using a manual wheelchair or walker can have difficulty with
ambulation because such devices require the use of both hands to be operational.
Conversely, a person who relies on a cane to walk has an available hand to
carry items. A person reliant on a cane can ambulate effectively under SSA’s
definition.
To ambulate effectively, SSA also indicates
that a person must be able to walk at a reasonable pace over sufficient
distance to carry out activities of daily living. Effective ambulation further
requires that a person be capable of walking at a reasonable pace on rough or
uneven surfaces for a full block. A person must be capable of walking up a few
steps at a reasonable pace with the use of a single hand rail to be considered
ambulatory. Finally, a person must be able to use public transportation to
carryout routine ambulatory activities like shopping to meet SSA’s requirements
for effective ambulation. For more information on SSA’s definition of “effective
ambulation,” please see: http://www.ssa.gov/disability/professionals/bluebook/1.00-Musculoskeletal-Adult.htm
.
Got a question about SSDI or SSI that you
need us to answer? Please check out our website at www.westcoastdisability.com . We try to
provide you with helpful information on our website that will allow you to successfully
navigate the Social Security Disability process. Also, feel free to email me
your questions at megan@westcoastdisability.com or call me at (800)
459-3017 x 103.
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