Promising Practices
SAMHSA’s SSI/SSDI Outreach, Access, and Recovery (SOAR) initiative is identifying successful strategies that communities use to assist homeless persons with their Social Security Administration (SSA) disability applications. Several promising practices have already emerged from SOAR.
Improving Documentation
Most important are practices to improve the documentation that individuals and their case managers include in applications. “When you talk to case managers, they often don’t understand why SSA denied the applications they submitted on behalf of homeless persons,” explained Deborah Dennis, M.A., Vice President, Policy Research Associates. Ms. Dennis oversees SOAR for the interagency partners. “It’s really a question of the information that Social Security has to work with,” she said.
In the past, case managers would simply include a client’s medical records, which typically document diagnosis, symptoms, and treatment. However, this information often does not provide enough medical evidence to link an applicant’s impairments to the inability to work.
Including information about an individual’s disability and limits on day-to-day functioning
is the key to a successful application. Once case managers understand what documentation SSA needs
to make a decision, it’s easier to provide this information.
Back to Top
Building Relationships
Building strong relationships with SSA field office staff is also a good practice, for answers if there's a question about the application process. In addition, building good relationships with the State Disability Determination Services offices is beneficial for getting answers to questions about the disability process.
Back to Top
Serving as a Representative
Having a case manager become an applicant’s representative is another promising practice. Filling out the SSA-required form (the one-page Appointment of Representative form) allows a case manager to act on an applicant’s behalf and to receive a copy of everything SSA sends to an applicant.
This practice makes it less likely that crucial communications will be lost or that deadlines will be missed.
For more information, visit SAMHSA’s link to the SOAR Web site at www.pathprogram.samhsa.gov/SOAR.
« See Part 1: Social Security Benefits: Outreach, Access, and Recovery
« See Part 2: Social Security Benefits: Outreach, Access, and Recovery
See Also—Social Security Benefits: Outreach, Access, and Recovery
Resources on Homelessness »
Next Article »
Back to Top
|