Do You Need Help With Your Disability Claim?

Social Security Disability Attorneys and Advocates can help you in all phases of the social security disability claim process. Contact an advocate today for your FREE case evaluation!

Posts Tagged ‘Obesity’

Clinical Obesity and Receiving Social Security Disability

Friday, March 18th, 2011
Obesity

Image via Wikipedia

What does clinical obesity mean? What is it?

Obesity means having too much body fat. It is not the same as being overweight because weighing too much can come from muscle, bone, fat and/or body water. Both of the terms mean that your weight is more than what is considered healthy for your height.

There is a definition for clinical obesity. It is defined by weighing more than 100lbs. over what is considered to be your ideal weight.

There are several ways that you may be affected by clinical obesity. Some of these are:

§  Sleep apnea

§  Always feeling hot

§  Snoring

§  Excessive sweating

§  Daytime sleepiness or fatigue

§  Rashes or infection in folds of your skin

§  Difficulty sleeping

§  Pain in your joints or back

§  Depression

§  Feeling out of breath with minor exertion.

You may say, “I’ve always been overweight. Why should I worry or do anything about it.”

There are many dangerous risks and complications that you face with clinical obesity. Around 300,000 deaths each year in America are directly related to obesity.

Clinical obesity can affect you or contribute to you developing many debilitating diseases and conditions. Some of the many chronic diseases and conditions that clinical obesity increases your risk of developing are:

§  Type 2 (adult-onset) diabetes

§  High blood pressure

§  High cholesterol

§  Heart attack

§  Congestive heart failure

§  Stroke

§  Gout

§  Gallstones

§  Osteoarthritis

§  Sleep apnea

§  Pickwickian syndrome

§  Certain types of cancer.

As you can see, the complications resulting from or being associated with clinical obesity can be incapacitating. In fact, clinical obesity and related conditions may be why you or a loved one is not able to work. It may be why you are disabled.

If this is true, you or your loved one may need help. You may need financial assistance.

Who can and will help you? Where will the financial assistance come from?

Have you or your loved one applied for Social Security disability benefits from the Social Security Administration because of the disability caused by clinical obesity and/or complications resulting from or associated with this condition? Were you or your loved one denied by the Social Security Administration?

You or your loved one may be planning on appealing the denial by the Social Security Administration. If this is what you decide to do, here is something that you need to think about.

You will need a good disability lawyer like the one that you will find at SocialSecurityHome.com to advise you in what can be a long and trying process. The reason why this is true is because people who have a knowledgeable disability attorney on their side are approved more often than those people who do not have a lawyer.

Bulimia Nervosa and Receiving Social Security Disability

Friday, February 19th, 2010

Many people do not know how large a problem obesity and being overweight are in the United States. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention say that 67% of Americans who are 20 years of age and above are either obese or overweight. That means that more than two out of every three Americans are either obese or overweight.

Nearly all of us eat too much at one time or another. Taking second and third helpings of food at holidays like Thanksgiving or Christmas are examples of this. If overeating is something that you do habitually and uncontrollably, you may have a disorder that is called bulimia nervosa.

Bulimia nervosa, which is simply called bulimia much of the time, is an eating disorder that is characterized by recurrent binge eating. This eating disorder is similar to binge eating disorder. The primary difference in these two eating disorders is that a person with bulimia nervosa follows their binge eating with some method of purging or bingeing to prevent gaining weight. These unhealthy methods include self induced vomiting, laxatives, enemas, diuretics and over exercise.

The signs and symptoms of both types of bulimia nervosa are similar. There are several physical signs and symptoms of this eating disorder. These include:

  • Irregular heartbeat
  • Bloating
  • Scars, calluses or sores on your hands or knuckles
  • Abnormal function of your bowels
  • Amenorrhea (loss of menstruation) or menstrual irregularities in women
  • Damaged gums and teeth
  • Dry skin
  • Fatigue
  • Swollen salivary glands in your cheeks
  • Dehydration
  • Sores in your mouth and throat.

There are also behavioral and emotional signs and symptoms of bulimia nervosa. Some of these are:

  • Hoarding food
  • Exercising for long, extended time periods
  • Going to the bathroom during meals or after eating
  • Ongoing dieting
  • Anxiety
  • Feeling like your eating is out of your control
  • Depression
  • Eating until you feel pain or discomfort
  • Misusing diuretics, enemas or laxatives
  • Having an excessive, distorted negative body image of yourself
  • Preoccupation with your weight or body shape
  • Eating far more food than in a normal snack or meal.

You or a loved one may have bulimia nervosa. This condition and/or complications resulting from or other conditions along with it may be why you are disabled. It may be the reason why you need financial help.

You or your loved one may have applied for financial assistance from the Social Security Administration by applying for Social Security disability benefits or disability benefits. Were you denied?

If you or your loved one intends to appeal the denial by the Social Security Administration, here is something important for you to think about. People who have a disability lawyer like the one you will find at socialsecurityhome.com are approved more often than people who are not represented by a disability attorney.

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]