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Doctors and Disabilities: Three Myths

Medical professionals who are diagnosed with an unexpected disability are at risk of
losing a significant income stream. Three common misconceptions about disabilities
can jeopardize your financial security.

Fact #1: The truth is that over 1,000,000 Florida residents, age 16 to 64, suffer from a
disability. The tables are turned when a physician becomes disabled. Doctors expect to heal the injured, not be disabled themselves.

Fact #2: Even when you have disability benefits, the insurance company may try to deny
or discredit valid claims.

Fact #3: Medical professionals are trained to heal the injured, not deal with arcane legal
provisions commonly found in insurance plan documents.

Diagnosis: Financial Disability

Our attorneys have helped many health care professionals navigate the confusing claims process. The best time to consult with an experienced disability insurance attorney is while you are still working and just starting to think about making a claim.

Click on the link to download our client alert on Doctors and Disability Claims: Three Myths.

Fort Lauderdale Disability Lawyer for Professionals

If you are a business or medical professional who has suffered an unexpected disability through illness or injury, contact Fort Lauderdale disability lawyer Howard Kahn if your disability benefits are at risk. We can help you understand and protect your legal rights to disability benefits. Contact us online or by phone at 954-321-0176.

October is National Disability Employment Awareness Month

Employers, schools and organizations of all sizes are encouraged to participate in  National Disability Employment Awareness Month. This is a national campaign that raises awareness about disability employment issues and celebrates the many and varied contributions of America’s workers with disabilities.

While we think of accidents as a leading cause of disability, it is more likely that a person will become disabled due to an illness. Frequent contributors include chronic fatigue, carpal tunnel, back pain, depression, or macular degeneration.

Business professionals and medical experts who are diagnosed with an unexpected disability are particularly at risk of losing a significant income stream.

Your Legal Rights to Disability Benefits

The disability attorneys at Kahn & Resnik, P.L. are experienced in working with doctors and business professionals who have trouble obtaining expected disability insurance benefits. We understand potential coverage issues, including:

  • Date at which benefits become available (elimination periods)
  • Length of time benefits are received
  • Compensation history on which benefits are calculated
  • Definition of comparable work
  • Full-time versus part-time work
  • Estimates of future earnings
  • Total disability versus residual or partial disability claims

Our attorneys have helped many professionals pursue disability benefits in claims against the country’s leading disability insurance carriers throughout the United States.

Fort Lauderdale Disability Lawyer for Professionals

If you are a business or medical professional who has suffered an unexpected disability through illness or injury, contact Fort Lauderdale disability lawyer Howard Kahn if your disability benefits are at risk. We can help you understand and protect your legal rights to disability benefits. Contact us online or by phone at 954-321-0176.

Americans with Disabilities Act Marks 12th Anniversary

The Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), which prohibits discrimination against people with disabilities in employment, transportation, public accommodation, communications, and governmental activities, was first signed into law by President George H.W. Bush on July 26, 1990.

Discrimination is only one obstacle that a disabled person may experience. Highly trained professionals who suffer an unexpected disability through illness or injury are at risk of a significant and sudden drop in income. Even if disability insurance is in effect, the insurance carrier may make it very difficult for the professional to receive the level of monetary benefits to which they are entitled under the disability policy.

Your Legal Rights to Disability Benefits

The disability attorneys at Kahn & Resnik, P.L. are experienced in working with doctors and business professionals who have trouble obtaining expected disability insurance benefits. We understand potential coverage issues, including:

  • Date at which benefits become available (elimination periods)
  • Length of time benefits are received
  • Compensation history on which benefits are calculated
  • Definition of comparable work
  • Full-time versus part-time work
  • Estimates of future earnings
  • Total disability versus residual or partial disability claims

Our attorneys have helped many professionals pursue disability benefits in claims against the country’s leading disability insurance carriers throughout the United States.

Contact a Fort Lauderdale Disability Attorney for Professionals

If you are a highly skilled medical or business professional, contact attorney Howard Kahn, Esq. if your disability insurance benefits are in dispute following an injury or illness. Mr. Kahn works with physicians, internists, specialists, surgeons, podiatrists, dentists, chiropractors, accountants, architects, attorneys, business owners and other professionals in need of assistance with a disability claim.

Female Entrepreneurs and Professionals Lack Disability Insurance

Women are most at risk both physically and financially when it comes to disability, according to a new study released by The State Farm® Center for Women and Financial Services at The American College.

Data from Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) shows women are increasingly more likely to experience a disabling condition during their working and senior years. Arthritis, the leading cause of disability among adult Americans, is more than twice as likely to affect women as men. The incidence of disability for females has risen at a disproportionate rate relative to males, according to data from the Social Security Administration.

Employer-sponsored plans are the most common means of disability insurance, however less than half have this benefit with women less likely than men (45 percent vs. 51 percent) to be covered. Female entrepreneurs are at even greater risk.

Another survey released by The American College in January 2012, focused on small business owners, found that only 22 percent of women small business owners own, and offer their employees, short and long-term disability coverage.

Even when professionals have disability insurance, a commonly held myth is that the insurance policy will cover all conditions and health care costs. The truth is that even when you have disability benefits, the insurance company may try to deny or discredit valid claims.

Read more about Women and the Risk of Disability.

Fort Lauderdale Disability Lawyer for Professionals

If you are a business professional who has suffered an unexpected disability through illness or injury, contact Fort Lauderdale disability lawyer Howard Kahn if your disability benefits are at risk. We can help you understand and protect your legal rights to disability benefits. Contact us onlineor by phone at 954-321-0176.

Social Security: Disabled Worker Benefits at Age 62

Below is an interesting Q&A about Social Security’s treatment of disabled workers once they reach age 62. It appeared in a PBS column by Larry Kotlikoff, author of  Social Security original 34 “secrets”, his additional secrets, his Social Security “mistakes” and his Social Security gotchas.

Dear Larry,

You told me recently about the nuances of disability benefits. A lot of questions on this page come from people on SSDI — Social Security Disability Insurance. Furthermore, as I was amazed to discover when responding to a question about the minimum wage reducing the welfare rolls, some 14 million Americans depend on disability payments from SS, which dwarfs the 4.3 million getting welfare checks.

Would you please share your discoveries about details of disability benefits that may escape notice?

Larry Kotlikoff: Paul, Social Security has a separate set of equally Byzantine provisions governing disabled workers as it does non-disabled workers.

I want to point out a couple of features of Social Security’s treatment of disabled workers once they reach age 62. I’m answering your question in order to assist those who have a hard enough time as it is. (Full disclosure: I’ve been helped enormously on this column by Jerry Lutz, a former technical expert on Social Security.)

Let me illustrate the options available only to the disabled by considering a disabled worker I’ll call “Joe,” about to turn 62.

First, Joe can continue to collect his disability benefit through full retirement age (66 in Joe’s case) with no reduction in the amount. In contrast, non-disabled workers who apply for their Social Security retirement benefits between age 62 and their full retirement age are forced to take permanently reduced benefits.

Once Joe reaches full retirement age, his disability benefit automatically converts to his full retirement benefit. So disabled workers are, in effect, given their full retirement benefit starting four, gradually rising to five, years before they reach full retirement age. That’s 25 percent more than the non-disabled can get. Like you Paul, I’m all for helping the disabled, and I’m glad this feature is in the law.

Second, if Joe has been married for at least one year and his wife is collecting a retirement benefit or she has applied for a retirement benefit, but suspended its collection, Joe can receive an excess spousal benefit between age 62 and 66, though it will be reduced because he’s taking it before his full retirement age of 66.

The excess spousal benefit is calculated as the difference between 50 percent of Joe’s wife’s full retirement benefit and his own full retirement benefit. Assuming this excess is positive, Joe gets 70 percent of this amount starting at the tender age of 62.

If Joe is divorced, but was married for at least 10 years, he can collect a spousal benefit from 62 to 66 even if his ex is already collecting her retirement benefit or has suspended its collection. Moreover, if she hasn’t started collecting or hasn’t suspended, he can still collect an excess spousal benefit on her earnings history if she is over age 62 and they have been divorced for at least two years. (I keep telling you the rules are Byzantine, Paul, which is why answers like these can be so hard to write — and to follow.)

By the way, unlike a non-disabled worker, Joe isn’t automatically required to apply for his excess spousal benefit. Social Security calls such applications “deeming.” There is, however, no deeming for the disabled. This is important because, as I’ll explain in a moment, it might be better for Joe not to apply for his excess spousal benefit. Danger lurks.

When Joe reaches 66, he can tell Social Security he doesn’t want to take his own retirement benefit. In SS lingo, he will ask to “withdraw” his own benefit. If he doesn’t do so, his disability benefit will automatically be converted to a retirement benefit.

But if he “withdraws” his retirement benefit, Joe’s reduced excess spousal benefit will flip to a reduced full spousal benefit: 50 percent of his spouse’s full retirement benefit, no matter if she’s his wife or his ex. And if he hasn’t taken an excess spousal benefit by age 66, he’ll can still request his full spousal benefit.

Now for that danger-lurks moment. If Joe took his excess spousal benefit starting at 62, the 70 percent reduction factor would be applied to his full spousal benefit. That would mean getting 70 percent of 50 percent of his wife’s or ex-wife’s full retirement benefit.

If the excess spousal benefit is small, taking it would be a mistake for Joe because it will mean not much money before 66 and less money, potentially a lot less money, after 66. In other words, this second option makes sense of his the full retirement benefit of his wife or ex is more than double his own full retirement benefit. Since Joe is disabled, she may well have earned much higher benefits. But you can’t assume anything.

So Joe needs to be careful should well-meaning folks at SS try help him, say at age 62, to get the maximum at that age. They might also be helping him forgo higher benefits after age 66.

The advantage to Joe of withdrawing his retirement benefit, of course, is that he can then wait until 70 to collect his own retirement benefit, which will reach its maximum amount at that point, a full 32 percent higher that had he started taking it at age 66. His full spousal benefit, reduced or not depending on whether he took his excess spousal benefit prior to 66, can help facilitate the wait.

Non-disabled workers who take Social Security retirement benefits early are generally deemed to be applying for their excess spousal benefits and then are stuck with those reduced excess spousal benefits for the rest of their lives. They don’t have the ability to withdraw their retirement benefit at full retirement age and flip to their full spousal benefit.

Remember the larger purpose here: for Joe to wait until age 70 to start his retirement benefit and benefit from the Delayed Retirement Credit. At age 70, Joe will get the larger of his own retirement benefit or his full spousal benefit hit, again hit by the reduction factor that prevailed if and when he took his excess spousal benefit.

The big if here is that I’m assuming Joe has a pretty high maximum age of life – something like 85. Note that I say “maximum age of life” rather than “life expectancy.” Since Joe may make it to his maximum age of life, he should be planning to live that long. He can’t count on dying on time — at his life expectancy, that is. As Paul and I both regularly emphasize, the greatest danger is outliving your resources. That’s why waiting until 70, as I spelled out in a popular recent column, is, with some exceptions, — and with SS there are always exceptions — so important, if you can manage to wait.

Fort Lauderdale Disability Lawyer for Professionals

If you are a business or medical professional who has suffered an unexpected disability through illness or injury, contact Fort Lauderdale disability lawyer Howard Kahn if your disability benefits are at risk. We can help you understand and protect your legal rights to disability benefits. Contact us online or by phone at 954-321-0176.