Is Medulloblastoma a Condition Which Automatically Qualifies for Disability?

A medulloblastoma is a form of brain cancer. The cancerous tumor forms in the lower part of the brain called the cerebellum, which controls muscle coordination, balance and movement. Medulloblastoma is a fairly common brain tumor, typically found in children. The cause of the tumor is unknown but has been linked to genetics. While this form of cancer is typically found in children, it can also be found in adults, usually in their younger years.

The typical symptoms associated with this cancer include:

  • balance difficulties
  • cognitive decline
  • dizziness
  • blurry vision
  • fatigue
  • headaches
  • nausea
  • hearing loss

Depending upon the severity of the tumor, your doctor may recommend different treatments such as brain surgery, radiation therapy or chemotherapy. All three treatment options leave the individual exposed to potential lifelong issues.

Social Security’s Compassionate Allowance

Having a cancerous tumor in your cerebellum is considered quite severe and frankly life-threatening if left untreated. Because of the symptoms related to this type of tumor along with the potential side effects from treatment, social security has included this condition on its compassionate allowance list. A condition that is designated as a compassionate allowance is one in which the social security administration believes to be so disabling that as long as there is certain medical proof supporting the condition, you will automatically be found disabled. Medulloblastoma is found to be one of those conditions.

To be found disabled under this compassionate allowance, you must have diagnostic testing diagnosing medulloblastoma made by imaging, spinal tap, or an analysis of the tumor after surgical resection. In addition to diagnostic testing, you would need to show physical findings related to the tumor such as headaches, nausea, problems with motor skills, fatigue, head tilting, double vision, facial weakness, tinnitus, neck pain or inability to control the bladder.

Social Security’s Listings

If your imaging or physical findings are insufficient to qualify as a compassionate allowance, social security may also review your condition for a possible Listing. The Listings are similar to a compassionate allowance in that both involve lists of severe medical conditions that would automatically qualify you for disability benefits. Compassionate allowance conditions tend to be more life-threatening and irreversible whereas Listed conditions do not always have the same urgency to them. In terms of medulloblastoma, social security will review Listing 13.13 to see if your condition meets this specific listing.

Listing 13.13 reviews cancers involving the nervous system, including the brain and spinal cord. You may be found disabled either under the A or B criteria:

  • The A criteria requires proof of a primary central nervous system cancer that is either a glioblastoma multiforme, any grade III or Grade IV cancer including medulloblastoma, or any cancer that is metastatic, progressive or recurrent following initial anticancer therapy.
  • The B criteria require proof of a peripheral nerve cancer that is metastatic or progressive following therapy. Both criteria require the cancer be metastatic or recurrent.

If your medulloblastoma is treatable or in remission, you likely will not automatically qualify for disability benefits. This does not mean you are not disabled. It simply means you will not automatically be found disabled using a compassionate allowance or a Listing.

If this is the case, you may also be found disabled by showing either the tumor itself or the effects of treatment have caused significant limitations, such that you are unable to work in any capacity. After reviewing your case for a compassionate allowance or a listing, the social security administration will then determine what residual functional capacity you have.

Residual Functional Capacity

Your residual functional capacity is the most you are functionally capable of doing, in spite of your limitations. It is important to note that the regulations look at the most you are capable of doing, not what the average is. This factor alone makes proving you are disabled quite difficult. Especially if you struggle with good and bad days during the week, where you have a couple of good days followed by a few bad days. Social security will see those good days and use those to determine your functional capacity.

When determining your residual functional capacity, social security will take the following into consideration:

  1. First review your medical records for diagnosis, limitations and treatment recommendations. It is important your medical provider documents all of your limitations. If those limitations are not documented, social security will not use them in determining your limitations. It is also important your medical provider does not simply cut and paste your treatment notes. This is something common in the medical profession. Rather than update the treatment notes after every visit, they will simply copy and paste the notes from your initial visit and then just add at the end any changes in your treatment plan. This does not help if at your initial visit with the provider you were having a “good” day. If that is the case, then your treatment notes, no matter how extensive, will all portray minimal limitations, even if the treatment plan is more extreme. This will call into question the severity of your conditions and residual functional capacity.
  2. A statement from your medical professional is helpful for the social security administration when determining your residual functional capacity. Oftentimes a statement from your doctor about your limitations will provide the best evidence for your disability claim. Specifically, with medulloblastoma, it would be important for your medical provider to note coordination and balance difficulties along with comprehension or cognitive decline.
  3. Once your residual functional capacity is assessed, social security will then determine how that impacts your ability to work. They will first assess your ability to perform any work you have done in the past fifteen years. If your functional abilities preclude performance of your past work, social security will then look to see if there is any other work available in the national economy which can be performed in spite of your functional limitations. If no work is found, you will then be deemed disabled.

There are several avenues in which you may be found disabled from medulloblastoma. Depending upon the severity of your diagnosis, you may qualify for a compassionate allowance or a listing. If your condition does not meet a compassionate allowance or listed condition, your functional capabilities will then be reviewed to determine if your limitations are work preclusive. Whatever the severity of your condition, if you have found yourself unable to work due to the symptoms of medulloblastoma, you should consider applying for disability benefits.

LaBovick Law Group Can Help Win Your Claim

At the LaBovick Law Group, we are experienced in winning these types of claims. We also do not charge upfront costs. We only get paid if we are able to win your claim. Call us today for a free consultation at (561) 623-3681.

It’s easy to get started

Fill out the form or call us at 561-888-8888

Meet your legal team

We fight to win you more

It’s Easy to Get Started

Fill out the form or call us at 561-888-8888

Meet your legal team

We fight to win you more

Premises liability

PREMISE LIABILITY

$450,000

James was searching for equipment for painting at Home Depot. In the aisle next to him, there was a worker on a lift stocking the highest shelf. The worker pushed boxes so far across the shelf that they fell off the other edge and hit James in the head. The force almost knocked James unconscious. He sat down and the loud bang got the worker off the ladder to see what fell. When they saw James they offered him a bucket and made a report. James did not recall leaving the store or how he got home. He did not recall much except being at home depot and getting hit in the head. Home Depot told him that it was a small box of dust masks that hurt him. We discovered it was actually a large box of emergency kits that fell off the shelf.

Personal injury

PERSONAL INJURY

$850,000

In this case, our client slipped and fell on water that had accumulated near the hot tubs/showers on the Lido deck of a major cruise line ship. The client suffered torn ligaments to her shoulder that required 2 arthroscopic surgeries. The cruise line took the position that the condition on the floor was open and obvious.

Premises liability

PREMISES LIABILITY

$980,000

Georgia was visiting a friend in the hospital when she walked out of the elevator and into her friend’s room. As soon as she entered the room she slipped on a newly mopped floor without any wet floor sign present. The floor was so wet that Georgia’s entire outfit was soaked. Because of the muted tile floor, the water was invisible. Georgia needed a back operation which was unsuccessful and caused her to slip into a coma. She luckily survived.

Motor vehicle accident

MOTOR VEHICLE ACCIDENT

$1.1 MILLION

AUTOMOBILE REAR END COLLISION

Rodrigo was driving his work truck home when he was rear-ended at a stoplight. Rodrigo needed a fusion of his thoracic spine. A terrible and complex operation. Unfortunately, while Rodrigo was undergoing the spinal operation, one of his children died and he was unable to be with his grieving wife. It was a tragic case that eventually settled.

Bicycle vs car accident

BICYCLE VS CAR ACCIDENT

$1.45 MILLION

David was a teacher at a local high school. He rode his bike to school in the morning and after school would ride another 10 miles for exercise. On a sunny afternoon on his way home an older driver turned right into him as he was riding down the street. He hurt his shoulder and neck and needed two operations. Defendant felt his injury was due to playing football 10 years earlier and would not provide him a fair or reasonable offer.

Car vs commercial truck accident

CAR VS COMMERCIAL TRUCK ACCIDENT

$3.4 MILLION

Joe was driving his 18 wheeler on the Florida Turnpike headed south after a long-haul run.  He was “bobtailing” which means he did not have a cargo trailer on the back of his truck rig.  A drunk driver lost control of his car causing Joe to avoid the accident but drive off the highway and into a canal.  He was injured in the accident but also witnessed a child die when he climbed out of the truck and came to the accident site.  There the injured child was trapped under the car and he was powerless to save the child before it passed.

Auto accident T-Bone

AUTO ACCIDENT T-BONE

$4.5 MILLION

Xao, a Vietnamese immigrant was driving home after work at night to see his pregnant wife. He stopped at a 4-way intersection and looked both ways. He did not see anyone in either direction. As Mr. X when through the intersection he was hit on the passenger side door by a mid-sized black SUV driving without their lights on. Mr. X was catastrophically injured.

Personal injury

PERSONAL INJURY

$8.2 MILLION

This was a hard-fought pedestrian accident case, in which our client was struck by an SUV driven by a teen driver, as they attempted to cross North Military Trail in West Palm Beach, FL. As a result of the accident, our client suffered numerous fractures, partial loss of vision and frontal lobe brain injury that affected his speech, and other personal injuries that required him to be hospitalized for 58 days.

At the time of the accident, our client was a cashier at Walmart and has been unable to return to work.

“This case is the epitome of what we consider part of our Core Culture and broad vision – which is to be Warriors for Justice,” stated Brian LaBovick. “Mr. Jacobus has serious permanent injuries and will continue to fight to regain his life into the foreseeable future. This verdict will allow him to get the professional help he needs to safely navigate the rest of his life.”

Medical malpractice

MEDICAL MALPRACTICE

$15 MILLION

Brain damages child due to medical negligence.  Mother was misdiagnosed upon entry to the hospital while under contractions.  The child was born severely disabled.