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How to Win Disability Benefits for PTSD
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Marc Whitehead
281-914-4940
Every year tens of thousands of disability applications are denied by the Social Security Administration, Insurance Companies, and the Veterans Affairs Department, including applications for PTSD. When they break their promise to you, you need to do what it takes to make them keep it.
In this video, I will give you advice, tools, and, most importantly, a plan to help you win your disability benefits and, most importantly, get the peace of mind you deserve. The principles I will share with you cover disability claims against the Social Security Disability, Long-Term Disability, and the Department of Veterans Affairs.
PTSD is a psychiatric disorder that can occur after experiencing or witnessing a traumatic event. PTSD can be seen in our military veterans, victims or torture, and survivors of traumatic events.
Signs and symptoms of PTSD vary with each person and include
• distressing memories, dreams, and flashbacks related to the trauma or stressor;
• constant negative emotional states;
• anxiety and aggression;
• trouble concentrating; and
• sleep disorders
Sometimes PTSD will surface months or years after the traumatic or stressor-related event. Insurance carriers can use this to argue that since you have worked for months or years, you are not disabled.
The route by which most claims for PTSD are approved is by proving medically that your condition or the side effect you’re your medication for PTSD prevent you from working on a full time basis. Evidence of interference with you pace, persistenace and concentration in attempting full work day or week is critical.
For Veterans, Service connection for PTSD is presumed when they meet the following requirements:
• You are adequately diagnosed with PTSD;
• A link is established by medical evidence between your current symptoms and an in-service stressor; and
• Due to your resulting symptoms, you cannot function in everyday life as you formerly could.
Submit a claim that fulfills these demands, and VA should find you are qualified to receive disability compensation.
If you win your hard-earned disability benefits, you can get monthly benefits, Medicare, auxiliary benefits for your minor children, and peace of mind knowing you can pay your bills.
Don't be a victim of government bureaucracy or a profit-hungry insurance company.
To learn more, download our free eBooks,
• The Social Security Disability Puzzle: How to Fit the Pieces Together and Win Your Claim
• Veterans Disability Claims: Strategies for a Winning Campaign and
• Disability Insurance Policies: How to Unravel the Mystery and Prove Your Claim
Or, if you are ready to make them keep their promise, call us at 281-914-4940
281-914-4940
Every year tens of thousands of disability applications are denied by the Social Security Administration, Insurance Companies, and the Veterans Affairs Department, including applications for PTSD. When they break their promise to you, you need to do what it takes to make them keep it.
In this video, I will give you advice, tools, and, most importantly, a plan to help you win your disability benefits and, most importantly, get the peace of mind you deserve. The principles I will share with you cover disability claims against the Social Security Disability, Long-Term Disability, and the Department of Veterans Affairs.
PTSD is a psychiatric disorder that can occur after experiencing or witnessing a traumatic event. PTSD can be seen in our military veterans, victims or torture, and survivors of traumatic events.
Signs and symptoms of PTSD vary with each person and include
• distressing memories, dreams, and flashbacks related to the trauma or stressor;
• constant negative emotional states;
• anxiety and aggression;
• trouble concentrating; and
• sleep disorders
Sometimes PTSD will surface months or years after the traumatic or stressor-related event. Insurance carriers can use this to argue that since you have worked for months or years, you are not disabled.
The route by which most claims for PTSD are approved is by proving medically that your condition or the side effect you’re your medication for PTSD prevent you from working on a full time basis. Evidence of interference with you pace, persistenace and concentration in attempting full work day or week is critical.
For Veterans, Service connection for PTSD is presumed when they meet the following requirements:
• You are adequately diagnosed with PTSD;
• A link is established by medical evidence between your current symptoms and an in-service stressor; and
• Due to your resulting symptoms, you cannot function in everyday life as you formerly could.
Submit a claim that fulfills these demands, and VA should find you are qualified to receive disability compensation.
If you win your hard-earned disability benefits, you can get monthly benefits, Medicare, auxiliary benefits for your minor children, and peace of mind knowing you can pay your bills.
Don't be a victim of government bureaucracy or a profit-hungry insurance company.
To learn more, download our free eBooks,
• The Social Security Disability Puzzle: How to Fit the Pieces Together and Win Your Claim
• Veterans Disability Claims: Strategies for a Winning Campaign and
• Disability Insurance Policies: How to Unravel the Mystery and Prove Your Claim
Or, if you are ready to make them keep their promise, call us at 281-914-4940
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