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						Social Security 
						Fast-Tracks Decisions for People with Severe 
						DisabilitiesAgency Expands Compassionate Allowance 
						List
 
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		[August 23, 2018]  
		Nancy A. Berryhill, Acting Commissioner of Social Security, today 
		announced five new Compassionate Allowance conditions:  | 
        
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				Fibrolamellar Cancer, 
				
				Megacystis Microcolon Intestinal Hypoperistalsis Syndrome (MMIHS),
				
				
				Megalencephaly Capillary Malformation Syndrome (MCAP), 
				
				Superficial Siderosis of the Central Nervous System, 
				
				Tetrasomy 18p.  
			Compassionate Allowances is a program to quickly identify medical 
			conditions and serious diseases that meet Social Security’s 
			standards for disability benefits.
 “For nearly a decade, the Compassionate Allowance list has helped us 
			identify and fast-track cases where individuals have diseases that 
			are most likely to be approved for disability benefits,” said Acting 
			Commissioner Berryhill. “Social Security is committed to ensuring 
			Americans with qualifying disabilities quickly receive the benefits 
			they need.”
 
			
			 
			The Compassionate Allowances program identifies claims where the 
			applicant’s disease or condition clearly meets Social Security’s 
			statutory standard for disability. Due to the severe nature of many 
			of these conditions, these claims are often allowed based on medical 
			confirmation of the diagnosis alone.
 
			
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To date, over 500,000 people with serious disabilities have been approved 
through this fast-track policy-compliant disability process. The list has grown 
to a total of 233 conditions, including diseases such as pancreatic cancer, 
amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), and acute leukemia.
 The agency incorporates leading technology to easily identify potential 
Compassionate Allowances and make quick decisions. For disability cases not 
covered by this program, Social Security’s Health IT brings the speed and 
efficiency of electronic medical records to the disability determination 
process. When a person applies for disability benefits, Social Security must 
obtain medical records in order to make an accurate determination. It may take 
weeks for health care organizations to provide records for the applicant’s case. 
With electronic records transmission, Social Security is able to quickly obtain 
a claimant’s medical information, review it, and make a determination faster 
than ever before.
 
 For more information about the program, including a list of all Compassionate 
Allowances conditions, please visit
www.socialsecurity.gov/compassionate allowances.
 
				 
		[Jack MyersPublic Affairs Specialist
 Social Security Administration]
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