Heart disease can change every part of your life — including your ability to work. If your condition affects your stamina, limits your activity, or makes it unsafe to continue in your job, you may qualify for Social Security Disability (SSD) benefits. A Warren heart disease disability lawyer from Berger and Green can guide you through the process and help you pursue the financial support you need.
We know how overwhelming it can be to juggle an application for SSDI or SSI while dealing with a serious medical condition. Our team helps people apply for benefits, challenge denials, and move their claims forward — so they can focus on their health while we handle the legal steps. Our Social Security Disability lawyers serving Warren have spent more than 40 years helping clients manage these complex claims, and we’re prepared to get to work for you. Call now for your free consultation.
How Berger and Green Helps With Heart Disease Disability Claims
Managing a serious heart condition is challenging enough without handling Social Security’s rules and deadlines on your own. When Berger and Green takes your case, we handle the key steps of applying for benefits, appealing a denial, or representation at a hearing, making the process easier from start to finish. Our team completes and files the necessary paperwork, communicates with the SSA, and guides you through what to expect at each stage.
With more than 40 years of experience and a client-first approach, we help people in Warren understand their options, stay informed, and move their claim forward with confidence. This support becomes especially important once you see how detailed the Social Security Disability process can be.
Understanding the Social Security Disability Process
The Social Security Disability process moves through several stages. Knowing what comes next can make the experience easier to manage, especially when you’re already dealing with the demands of heart disease.
- Application: Your claim begins with the initial application. This is where the SSA reviews your medical records, work history, and how your symptoms affect your ability to function day to day. Many applicants are denied at this stage, even when they have strong medical evidence.
- Reconsideration: If the SSA denies your first application, you can request Reconsideration. A different reviewer takes another look at your claim and any new information you submit.
- Hearing and Beyond: If your claim is denied again, the next step is a hearing with an Administrative Law Judge. This is your opportunity for your attorney to present evidence during a hearing about your medical conditions and your inability to work. If you are denied benefits at the hearing, the next options include requesting a review with the Appeals Council or even going to federal court.
Berger and Green can help you prepare for what to expect at each step—whether that means completing and filing your application, submitting your appeal on time, or fighting for you at a hearing. Our goal is to keep your claim moving and make a complicated system easier to manage while you focus on your health.
40+ years of experience from strong, knowledgeable, compassionate attorneys.
Start A Free EvaluationHow Heart Disease Can Affect Your Ability to Work
Heart disease often shows up in ways that make steady, full-time work difficult long before someone feels “sick enough” to stop working. Conditions like coronary artery disease, chronic heart failure, cardiomyopathy, and arrhythmias can limit endurance, restrict physical activity, and make even simple tasks exhausting. Many people experience shortness of breath, chest discomfort, swelling, dizziness, or irregular heart rhythms that make it hard to stay on their feet, maintain pace, or manage stress.
Beyond the symptoms themselves, the unpredictability of flare-ups, medical appointments, surgeries, and recovery periods can make the workday unreliable. Jobs that require physical labor, standing, lifting, concentration, or time-sensitive tasks often become impossible to sustain. A Warren heart disease disability lawyer can help you understand how the SSA evaluates these limitations and how to present the impact your condition has on your ability to work.
Qualifying for SSD Benefits
The SSA doesn’t simply check whether you’ve been diagnosed with heart disease. They look at how your condition changes your everyday life. They want to understand how far you can walk, how often you need to rest, whether symptoms come on suddenly, and whether stress or exertion puts you at risk.
If those limitations prevent you from maintaining full-time work for at least 12 months, you may qualify for disability benefits. SSDI applicants generally need about 20 work credits — roughly five years of work — though the exact number varies based on age. SSI may be available if you have limited income and resources.
Heart disease affects everyone differently. What matters is showing the SSA the real impact your condition has on your ability to work safely and consistently.
We know you’re hurting. We can help. Free case evaluations, home and hospital visits.
Contact Us Now For HelpWhy Heart Disease Disability Claims are Often Denied
Many people are denied disability benefits the first time they apply. Many denials come down to how the information was presented or what the agency believes is missing. Heart disease claims in particular are often denied because the SSA needs very specific details about stamina, exertional limits, and whether your symptoms prevent you from working a full day on a consistent basis.
Some common issues that lead to denials include:
- Lack of detailed functional information: Applications that don’t clearly explain how symptoms limit walking, lifting, concentration, or endurance may not show the full picture.
- Incomplete medical documentation supplied to the SSA: If key test results, hospitalizations, or treatment notes aren’t included in the file the SSA reviews, your claim may appear weaker than it is.
- The SSA believes you could do lighter work: Heart disease symptoms can vary from day to day and claims sometimes fail to show how unpredictable or persistent those symptoms truly are.
- Missed deadlines or incomplete forms: Even small administrative issues can lead to denials.
When our Warren, Ohio heart disease disability lawyers prepare an application or appeal, we make sure the paperwork is completed correctly and that the SSA receives the information they need to properly evaluate your claim. Our goal is to present your case in a way that reflects the reality of your limitations and gives your claim the strongest chance of moving forward.
You need an attorney with the experience and dedication to give your case the care it deserves.
Start A Free EvaluationGet the Support You Need to Move Forward With Your Warren, OH Disability Claim
Heart disease can take a toll on every part of your life, and navigating the disability system on your own only adds to the pressure. Berger and Green is built to step in during moments like this. With more than 40 years of experience and thousands of clients served, our Warren heart disease disability lawyers have earned a reputation for steady guidance, personal attention, and a commitment to doing what’s best for the people we represent.
If you work with us, you’re supported at every stage by a team that knows the system and understands the challenges heart disease can create. If you’re ready to talk about your next steps, we’re ready to listen. Contact Berger and Green today for a free case evaluation.