Facebook, Twitter, My Space, etc. (collectively referred to as social media sites) are popular with people of all age groups. Long term disability insurance companies and their attorneys use these sites also, to get information about YOU. There may be valuable information about you on these sites that could severely damage your long term disability claim.
The long term disability insurance adjuster's job is to pay you as little as possible or to even deny or terminate your claim. Social media sites and blogs can help the adjusters do their job. The adjuster will try to disprove the extent and nature of your disability by viewing your activities depicted on the internet. Why do long term disability insurance companies look at social media sites?
(1) Doctors rely, in part, on your history and complaints in rendering an opinion about your diagnosis. The long term disability carrier will use the social media site to confirm or disprove that your activities and life style depicted on the internet support the information you gave your doctors that formed the basis of their opinions.
(2) The long term disability insurance company asks you to complete Activities of Daily Living forms, reporting your level of activity. If you say you cannot walk distances and there is a picture of you at Disney on your social media site, you have a problem.
(3) If you claim you are depressed or withdrawn, the long term disability carrier will use social media sites to confirm or disprove whether you interact normally with friends and family.
Pictures, videos, personal information, posts and comments can damage or even destroy your long term disability case. Do not post anything you would not feel comfortable having the insurance company or judge read. Check your privacy settings immediately and block anyone you do not know from viewing your personal pages. Search your name on all sites and on Google. See what comes up. Take appropriate action to remove photos which could be detrimental to your claim. Do not accept any friend request or answer any emails from people you do not know.
For more information or to get help from a disability attorney on long term disability claims, insurance companies, ERISA, appealing the denial of long term disability benefits, or terminations of benefits, see our website at http://www.stennettcasino.com/.
Showing posts with label long term disability. Show all posts
Showing posts with label long term disability. Show all posts
Thursday, October 15, 2009
Wednesday, May 14, 2008
HARTFORD RECIPE FOR LTD DENIAL
If you are receiving benefits under a Hartford disability policy then you should be aware of its recipe for denial. I have seen a consistent pattern of termination of benefits by Hartford. The strategy is to set a trap for the beneficiary that can be avoided if you are aware of the following.
Regardless of the form of your disability Hartford will send a functional capacity evaluation form to the treating doctor which will ask him/her to delineate the number of hours their patient can sit, stand, walk in an 8-hour work day. It will also ask many other questions regarding the patient’s functioning. Typically, the doctor will rely substantially on the patient’s statements of disabilities. The trap is this. The form typically does not conform to the individual disability that you may have. Thus though you may be able to sit for only 20 minutes in a work setting in front of a computer on a consistent basis, you may be able to sit for 2 hours in a car. Or, on a good day you may be able to do much more than on a bad day, which typically will follow a day of activity. Thus, the problem in a work setting becomes the inability to perform the same function day after day, 8-hours a day. The functional capacity form is typically filled out by the doctor and by the patient on the basis of the worst case scenario. Thus, the doctor may state that the patient can sit for only 20 minutes consecutively. What the doctor should be stating is that the patient is limited to 20 minutes sitting at a work station consecutively before their abilities to concentrate, etc. are interfered with by pain and discomfort. Or that their capacities vary and thus their limitations are based on an inability to perform consistent, day-after-day activities.
The trap is that once the physician sets out the limitations as being the ability to sit "only 20 minutes at a time," then Hartford sends a surveillance team to videotape the insured. Hartford will camp out at your residence at 6 a.m. and follow you for the entire day. They will do this for 2 to 3 days and if they are unsuccessful in finding you doing any activities they will come back another time and do it again. Inevitably, the insured will leave their home and perform errands such as shopping, going to the bank, going to church, etc. These errands will typically show the insured doing things beyond the limitations placed in the functional capacity evaluation forms completed by the treating doctor.
Once the surveillance is completed then Hartford will send an adjuster to the insured’s home for a 2 to 3 hour interview. During the interview they will obtain a signed statement from the insured listing all the limitations they have due to their disability. Then they pop out the video and ask the insured to identify themselves in the video and that indeed it reflects their abilities. The video will show the insured getting in and out of cars, driving cars, sitting in cars for extended periods of time, doing extended shopping for a half day or more. These will be perceived as inconsistent with the limitations the insured and the treating physician placed and thus makes the insured’s claim of disability appear to be false.
The reality is that an individual who is disabled from the grinds of a 40-hour work week is not necessarily disabled from life. They still have to perform activities of daily living that are required, whether one is working, or not. The abilities to go to the grocery store and the bank do not correlate with the ability to work a full time job. However, Hartford’s strategy is to get the insured to at least appear to overstate their disability and then discredit them with the video. If you understand Hartford’s strategy you can avoid the trap. Don’t place unrealistic, definite time limitations on any of your capacities. Concede your ability to do what you can do, with the important aspect being the things you cannot do that prevent you from returning to work.
For more information on how to protect your disability benefits visit our web site at StennettCasino.com.
Regardless of the form of your disability Hartford will send a functional capacity evaluation form to the treating doctor which will ask him/her to delineate the number of hours their patient can sit, stand, walk in an 8-hour work day. It will also ask many other questions regarding the patient’s functioning. Typically, the doctor will rely substantially on the patient’s statements of disabilities. The trap is this. The form typically does not conform to the individual disability that you may have. Thus though you may be able to sit for only 20 minutes in a work setting in front of a computer on a consistent basis, you may be able to sit for 2 hours in a car. Or, on a good day you may be able to do much more than on a bad day, which typically will follow a day of activity. Thus, the problem in a work setting becomes the inability to perform the same function day after day, 8-hours a day. The functional capacity form is typically filled out by the doctor and by the patient on the basis of the worst case scenario. Thus, the doctor may state that the patient can sit for only 20 minutes consecutively. What the doctor should be stating is that the patient is limited to 20 minutes sitting at a work station consecutively before their abilities to concentrate, etc. are interfered with by pain and discomfort. Or that their capacities vary and thus their limitations are based on an inability to perform consistent, day-after-day activities.
The trap is that once the physician sets out the limitations as being the ability to sit "only 20 minutes at a time," then Hartford sends a surveillance team to videotape the insured. Hartford will camp out at your residence at 6 a.m. and follow you for the entire day. They will do this for 2 to 3 days and if they are unsuccessful in finding you doing any activities they will come back another time and do it again. Inevitably, the insured will leave their home and perform errands such as shopping, going to the bank, going to church, etc. These errands will typically show the insured doing things beyond the limitations placed in the functional capacity evaluation forms completed by the treating doctor.
Once the surveillance is completed then Hartford will send an adjuster to the insured’s home for a 2 to 3 hour interview. During the interview they will obtain a signed statement from the insured listing all the limitations they have due to their disability. Then they pop out the video and ask the insured to identify themselves in the video and that indeed it reflects their abilities. The video will show the insured getting in and out of cars, driving cars, sitting in cars for extended periods of time, doing extended shopping for a half day or more. These will be perceived as inconsistent with the limitations the insured and the treating physician placed and thus makes the insured’s claim of disability appear to be false.
The reality is that an individual who is disabled from the grinds of a 40-hour work week is not necessarily disabled from life. They still have to perform activities of daily living that are required, whether one is working, or not. The abilities to go to the grocery store and the bank do not correlate with the ability to work a full time job. However, Hartford’s strategy is to get the insured to at least appear to overstate their disability and then discredit them with the video. If you understand Hartford’s strategy you can avoid the trap. Don’t place unrealistic, definite time limitations on any of your capacities. Concede your ability to do what you can do, with the important aspect being the things you cannot do that prevent you from returning to work.
For more information on how to protect your disability benefits visit our web site at StennettCasino.com.
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