Has anyone had one after that age , or got the mailer?
thanks
mike lane
>If you are 62 , will you still get CDR's ?
You can have a CDR after 62.
As a general rule, if you are 54.5 or older when your case was allowed
initially or when your last CDR was done, they will schedule you for
seven-year call up (med. improvement not expected), even if you have
an impairment that would ordinarily require a three-year call up (med.
improvement possible). There are exceptions.
So if you are, e.g., 57, they will diary your case to be called-up at
age 64.
https://s044a90.ssa.gov/apps10/poms.nsf/lnx/0426525040!opendocument
I was 56 when my case was approved by the ALJ in 2006. I received a 6
question mailer in February of this year. Got a letter back the 3rd of
this month saying they do not need to review my case. I am 59. Does
that mean I won't hear anything from them again for 7 years? Thank
You, Pam
>On Apr 15, 8:54=A0am, Windsw...@home.home (Jack) wrote:
>> On Wed, 15 Apr 2009 07:25:09 -0500, bbmcl...@webtv.net (Blockade
>>
>> Runner) wrote:
>> >If you are 62 , will you still get =A0CDR's ?
>>
>> You can have a CDR after 62.
>>
>> As a general rule, if you are 54.5 or older when your case was allowed
>> initially or when your last CDR was done, they will schedule you for
>> seven-year call up (med. improvement not expected), even if you have
>> an impairment that would ordinarily require a three-year call up (med.
>> improvement possible). =A0There are exceptions.
>>
>> So if you are, e.g., 57, they will diary your case to be called-up at
>> age 64.
>>
>> https://s044a90.ssa.gov/apps10/poms.nsf/lnx/0426525040!opendocument
>>
>>
>>
>> >Has anyone had one after that age , or got the mailer?
>>
>> >thanks
>> >mike lane- Hide quoted text -
>>
>> - Show quoted text -
>
>I was 56 when my case was approved by the ALJ in 2006. I received a 6
>question mailer in February of this year. Got a letter back the 3rd of
>this month saying they do not need to review my case. I am 59. Does
>that mean I won't hear anything from them again for 7 years? Thank
>You, Pam
That's the general rule for CDRs. There are exceptions such as
fractures and certain cancer cases. A person who was 59 at CDR and
who was put in for a 7-year call up will be 66 (full retirement age)
and therefore never called up.
But you had a deferral rather than a CDR. If your deferral was
handled totally by low grade clerks because the answers you provided
resulted in a clear-cut case, rather than by a disability examiner who
handles the more difficult cases, then the system input for your case
is triggered for a 3-year call-up. Instructions tell the coding
clerks to set the same call-up as the previous one. They're not
trained in impariment evaluation and the various age limitations for
setting diaries.
--------------------->>> I am wondering, i am over 55, been on SSD for
over 5 years, got-filled out-sent back in a short-form CDR back in
2006 i think. got a letter back saying "no review at this
time"...ok....i got another short-form CDR back in Oct. 2008. filled
it out mailed back in.....i have received nothing back from
S.S. ..........wondering, backlog? or because i am over 55? or maybe
S.S. has contacted my Doctor, and he has told them of my disability
status?
thanks
>As a general rule, if you are 54.5 or older when your case was allowed
>initially or when your last CDR was done, they will schedule you for
>seven-year call up (med. improvement not expected), even if you have
>an impairment that would ordinarily require a three-year call up
>(med.improvement possible). =A0
>There are exceptions.
>
>--------------------->>> I am wondering, i am over 55, been on SSD for
>over 5 years, got-filled out-sent back in a short-form CDR back in
>2006 i think. got a letter back saying "no review at this
>time"...ok....i got another short-form CDR back in Oct. 2008. filled
>it out mailed back in.....i have received nothing back from
>S.S. ..........wondering, backlog? or because i am over 55? or maybe
>S.S. has contacted my Doctor, and he has told them of my disability
>status?
>
>thanks
You should have gotten a notice telling you that there will be no CDR
(deferral) or else that a CDR is imminent. Six months after you
sent-in the short form is an awful long time. It may have fallen
through the cracks or is still sitting on someone's desk.
The delay has nothing to do with your age. Also, they do not contact
your doctors based on the short form.
If they're going to defer the CDR, they send you a notice to that
effect.
If they're planning to do the CDR, they send you the long form
(SSA-454) on which you give the names and addresses of your MDs, as
well as form SSA-827 which you fill-out to give them permission to
contact your MDs. Then they contact your MDs and do a CDR.