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Information for "Social Security/Administrative Claims Adjudication Process"

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Display titleSocial Security/Administrative Claims Adjudication Process
Default sort keySocial Security/Administrative Claims Adjudication Process
Page length (in bytes)30,066
Page ID21018
Page content languageen - English
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Page creatorLost Student (talk | contribs)
Date of page creation01:44, May 19, 2020
Latest editorLost Student (talk | contribs)
Date of latest edit01:44, May 19, 2020
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Since the Disability Insurance (DI) program was added to Social Security in 1956, claims for Social Security benefits based on an asserted medically determinable condition causing a long-term inability to work have dominated and challenged an adjudicatory process originally designed for resolving issues of age, earnings, employment, and family relationship. Congress, through subsequent amendments, and the administering federal agency, through a long history of regulatory elaboration of the statutory standard and adjustments to the procedures for applying it, have sought to bring greater consistency, accuracy, and fairness to decisions about who qualifies for this component of Social Security. When Congress created the Supplemental Security Income program (SSI) for low-income individuals in 1972, it loaded this complementary need-tested program onto the same disability definition, the same agency, and the same adjudicatory process. That added to the disability determination puzzle a population of individuals many of whom had no past employment record to serve as a benchmark. Among others these included children and adults who had survived on sources of income of which there was no trace on the records of the IRS or Social Security Administration.
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