2022 Annual Report of the SSI Program

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C. Historical Allowance Data
At the end of 2021, 86 percent of federally administered Supplemental Security Income (SSI) recipients were receiving benefits based on disability or blindness. Individuals file claims at a local Social Security office or over the telephone. We send claims requiring an evaluation of disability to the State disability determination services (DDS) for a disability decision.1 Applicants may appeal unfavorable initial DDS decisions. In general, the appeals process proceeds as follows2 3:
This process of application and appeal can span several years. However, before 1993, the only data available on the disability determination process resided in files compiled at each separate stage of the process and only captured various point-in-time snapshots. Only a longitudinal database of administrative records at all stages of appeal can provide a complete picture of the disability determination process. Beginning in 1993, and every year since, the Social Security Administration’s (SSA) Office of Disability Policy constructed such a longitudinal database, the “Title XVI Disability Research File,” to assist our agency in understanding and managing this process. However, as there are inconsistencies in the data collected from all the respective levels of appeal, certain considerations are made during the build process. The following sections present some additional details and qualifications essential to a complete understanding of the resulting data. Following these technical notes, tables V.C1 and V.C2 present the latest available summary of results on disability determinations under Title XVI.
1. Technical Notes on the Disability Research File
Methods used to build the Title XVI Disability Research File — The “base” file for the Title XVI Disability Research File is the Supplemental Security Record, the main computerized file for administering the SSI program. We match the “base” file against records from various other administrative sources, including transactions from the disability determination (SSA-831) files, Structured Data Repository (SDR), Social Security number identification records and earnings data, and hearing and Appeals Council level data.
Creating the Title XVI Disability Research File is a cumbersome process; it involves about 200 steps and generally requires 2 to 4 months to complete. The process is complex because we assemble the file based on filing date cohorts, and many of the source files do not contain a filing date. The basic data sources provide information for the 3 most recent calendar year cohorts. Older calendar year cohorts reflect updated activity since the last time we built the file. Since the process is so time consuming, we update the research file only annually (usually beginning in July); research file data are not yet available for claims filed in 2021.
Methods used for estimating results (through January 2022) for claims filed in 2021 — Although decision counts are available for 2021 filers from many of the source files, those counts do not translate directly into the claims/appeals counts in the following tables because we consolidate multiple transactions and apply claims-based tolerance rules when we build the Title XVI Disability Research File.
To prepare preliminary estimates of results through January 2022 for 2021 filers, we started from the latest available transaction data, such as the SSA-831 data, and took into account recent years’ experience of the relationship between corresponding earlier transaction data and the resulting claims/appeals data in completed research files. We estimate hearing and Appeals Council appeals activity from a file that tracks individual claimants, rather than individual claims, which has resulted in a slight undercount of hearing and Appeals Council individual claims. Recent revocation of the agency’s subsequent application (i.e., an application filed while an earlier claim is pending at a review level) policy should largely eliminate the disparity between the number of claims and claimants.
While we believe that these methods are reasonable, we emphasize that the resulting estimates may not be completely reliable, especially because the estimates give results only through January 2022, whereas the final research files will reflect information through at least June 2022. Actual data for 2021 will replace these estimates in the 2023 Annual Report.
2. General Considerations
Some general points that apply to tables V.C1 and V.C2 are as follows:
Data for 2021 filers are preliminary estimates as of January 2022, and reflect larger numbers of claims still pending. January 2022 data on number of appeals may be too low because larger numbers of claimants are still within the period allowed for filing an appeal (i.e., larger numbers of recently denied claimants who have not yet filed an appeal may appeal before the time limit runs out).
In certain pilot activities and under the revised process introduced October 1, 1999 in 10 States, individuals could appeal initial denials directly to the hearing level without a separate reconsideration step. As a result, the appeals of initial denials in these tables include cases that did not receive a decision at the reconsideration level.4
 
 
Table V.C1.—Disabled Adult Claims: Disposition of Applications for SSI
Disability Benefits by Year of Filinga and Level of Decisionb  
Reconsiderationsf

a
Data for claims filed in 1988‑2020 reflect results as of June 2021 at the DDS level and as of July 2021 at the hearing and Appeals Council levels. The
numbers of total claims filed for 2018-2020 are subject to change. Data for claims filed in 2021 are preliminary estimates as of January 2022. The ultimate numbers of allowances and denials are subject to change until all initial decisions have been completed and all appeals are final.

b
For claims filed in 2000 or later, we count allowances at the earliest adjudicative level of allowance. We count allowances for claims filed prior to 2000 at the highest adjudicative level reached.

c
Percentage of decisions at this level.

d
Includes certain cases that can be appealed directly to the hearing level.

e
Percentage of denials at this level appealed to next level.

f
Includes cases reviewed by the Office of the Federal Reviewing Official (OFedRO) during the period August 2006 through November 2008 as part of the DSI process.

g
Includes cases appealed to the hearing and Appeals Council levels and cases appealed to the Federal courts.

h
Number of persons appealing beyond the reconsideration level.

i
Includes cases remanded to SSA from the Federal courts.

j
Percentage of decisions at this level. For years in which decisions are still pending, the preliminary percentage shown is expected to ultimately be lower as all cases are processed. This occurs because allowances are generally processed more quickly than denials.

k
Includes denied claims where the final administrative action was a dismissal of an appeal request (e.g., the appeal was not filed timely or the applicant failed to appear at the scheduled hearing).

 
Table V.C2.—Disabled Child Claims: Disposition of Applications for SSI
Disability Benefits by Year of Filinga and Level of Decisionb  

a
Data for claims filed in 1988‑2020 reflect results as of June 2021 at the DDS level and as of July 2021 at the hearing and Appeals Council levels. The numbers of total claims filed for 2018-2020 are subject to change. Data for claims filed in 2021 are preliminary estimates as of January 2022. The ultimate numbers of allowances and denials are subject to change until all initial decisions have been completed and all appeals are final.

b
For claims filed in 2000 or later, we count allowances at the earliest adjudicative level of allowance. We count allowances for claims filed prior to 2000 at the highest adjudicative level reached.

c
Percentage of decisions at this level.

d
Includes certain cases that can be appealed directly to the hearing level.

e
Percentage of denials at this level appealed to next level.

f
Includes cases reviewed by the Office of the Federal Reviewing Official (OFedRO) during the period August 2006 through November 2008 as part of the DSI process.

g
Includes cases appealed to the hearing and Appeals Council levels and cases appealed to the Federal courts.

h
Number of persons appealing beyond the reconsideration level.

i
Includes cases remanded to SSA from the Federal courts.

j
Percentage of decisions at this level. For years in which decisions are still pending, the preliminary percentage shown is expected to ultimately be lower as all cases are processed. This occurs because allowances are generally processed more quickly than denials.

k
Includes denied claims where the final administrative action was a dismissal of an appeal request (e.g., the appeal was not filed timely or the applicant failed to appear at the scheduled hearing).

m
Less than 0.05 percent.


1
A relatively small number of cases are sent for evaluation to Extended Service Team, Flexible Disability Unit, and Disability Processing Branch sites. All references to “State DDS” include these sites as well.

2
SSA implemented the Disability Service Improvement (DSI) process in the Boston Region in August 2006 (for the SSI program and disability claims filed under the Social Security program). The DSI process eliminated reconsideration as the first level of appeal of an initial disability determination and introduced review by the Office of the Federal Reviewing Official (OFedRO) in its place. By final rule published in the Federal Register (73 FR 2411), SSA suspended new claims to the OFedRO level; this change was effective March 23, 2008 (correction to 73 FR 2411 in 73 FR 10381). For those initial disability appeals that had not been transferred to OFedRO on or before the effective date, the procedure for the first level of appeal reverted to that which was in place prior to August 2006 (i.e., reconsideration or to an ALJ for a hearing, whichever was applicable in that particular New England State at that time). The DSI regulations also modified administrative appeal of an ALJ’s decision or dismissal by: (1) setting requirements on the timeliness for submission of evidence for consideration by the ALJ; and (2) replacing the Appeals Council with the Decision Review Board. By final rule (76 FR 24802), we restored the Appeals Council, although the other modifications concerning when evidence could be submitted remained in effect in the Boston Region and were later expanded to all other regions.

3
Beginning in the mid-1990s, SSA conducted pilots testing revisions to this process and introduced a modification of this process that 10 States used for applications filed on or after October 1, 1999. The revised process eliminated the reconsideration step, so the first level of appeal of an initial determination was a request for hearing before an ALJ. SSA began reinstating the reconsideration level of appeal in these States via a staged roll-out on January 1, 2019, and completed this process by April 1, 2020.

4
SSA began reinstating the reconsideration level of appeal in these States via a staged roll-out on January 1, 2019, and completed this process before April 1, 2020.


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