In order to qualify for disability benefits, your disability must be expected to keep you out of work for at least a year. However, it can be difficult to determine how your condition will affect your working ability. Click on the condition below that you are suffering from for more information on how that condition affects your mental and physical capability to perform different work related tasks. If your symptoms are extreme enough to the point where you are unable to perform the job at which you previously worked or any other job for which you are qualified, you may qualify for SSD benefits.
- Ability to Work with ADHD
- Ability to Work with an Amputation
- Ability to work with Anxiety Disorders
- Ability to Work with Autism
- Ability to Work with Bipolar Disorder
- Ability to Work with Breast Cancer
- Ability to Work with Cancer
- Ability to Work with Carpel Tunnel Syndrome
- Ability to Work with COPD
- Ability to Work with Crohn's Disease
- Ability to Work with Degenerative Disc Disease
- Ability to Work with Diabetes
- Ability to Work with Epilepsy
- Ability to Work with Fibromyalgia
- Ability to Work with Kidney Failure
- Ability to Work with a Heart Attack
- Ability to Work with a Herniated Disc
- Ability to Work with a Macular Degeneration
- Ability to Work with Neuropathy
- Ability to Work with Obesity
- Ability to Work with Organ Transplant
- Ability to Work with Osteoarthritis
- Ability to Work With Osteoporosis
- Ability to Work with Prostate Cancer
- Ability to Work with PTSD
- Ability to Work with Rheumatoid Arthritis
- Ability to Work with Schizophrenia
- Ability to Work with Seizure Disorder
- Ability to Work with Sickle Cell
- Ability to Work with Spinal Cord Injury
- Ability to Work with Stroke
- Ability to Work with Thyroid Gland Disorders
- Ability to Work After a Traumatic Brain Injury
- Ability to Work with Vision Loss