Leaving a Job Due to Health Reasons
For many professionals, work is not only a source of income but also a core part of identity. When serious illness or injury interrupts your ability to perform your job, the decision to step away can be overwhelming. Leaving a job due to health reasons often involves a combination of medical, financial, and legal considerations that are not immediately obvious to employees or their families and are not easy to undertake alone.
This article explains common reasons for leaving a job due to health concerns, what protections and benefits may apply, and steps to take before making a final decision to leave work, or before submitting a disability insurance claim.
Common Reasons for Leaving a Job Due to Health Concerns
Not all health challenges are visible, and not all evolve to disabilities. Some are acute problems that come on suddenly, but many are chronic conditions that slowly erode the ability to work. No one begins a career with a mindset that it will be cut short by a disability, so even the process of acknowledging that health concerns are gradually impairing the ability to get your normal job done can take some time. Some health conditions that might eventually cause a disability include chronic fatigue, increasing pain, or neurological disorders that might impede cognitive acuity.
According to the Council for Disability Income Awareness, the most common reasons for long-term disability claims are:
- Musculoskeletal disorders (25%)
- Injuries such as fractures, sprains, and strains of muscles and ligaments (13%)
- Cancer (12%)
- Mental health issues (10%)
- Circulatory (heart attack, stroke) (8%)1
Yet many other health conditions, such as long-COVID, ME/CFS, neurological disorders like Parkinson’s Disease, and more can cause someone to leave the workforce. Each of these conditions can make regular attendance, concentration, and stamina nearly impossible, even for employees who are highly motivated to keep working.
Considering a Disability Claim Before Resignation
Before you submit a resignation letter, it is critical to consider whether you have a disability income insurance policy through your employer. Typically, your last day of work serves as your first date of disability, as you need to be a covered employee at the time of your date of disability. Resigning too soon might jeopardize your disability claim.
For many employees, the question is not only whether they can keep working, but also how they will support themselves if they cannot. Filing for disability insurance benefits before resigning can be a critical step.
Employer-sponsored long-term disability benefits may fill the gap. These benefits usually replace 50–70% of pre-disability income, subject to offsets for other sources of income such as state disability benefits, workers’ compensation benefits, or Social Security Disability Benefits, to name a few. Speaking with an ERISA attorney before finalizing your decision to leave work can ensure you do not unintentionally waive coverage.
Leaving a Job Due to Mental Health Reasons or Physical Conditions
Before deciding that you will leave your job and file a disability claim, it is important that you receive regular and appropriate care with a medical provider. For mental health disability claims, that usually means seeing a therapist on a regular basis, and working with an MD to explore medication options.
It is important to note that although a workplace can and frequently does contribute to the mental health condition, the mental health disability must be ongoing even outside of a particular workplace for it to rise to the level of a disability claim. Therefore, speak to your doctor not just about the stresses of the workplace, but how you might be struggling with your everyday activities as well.
Likewise, for physical disabilities, be sure that your doctor knows the “full picture” of how your health affects your life, both in and out of the workplace. Describe to your doctor what activities are difficult to accomplish, and what the effect is when you have worked a full day at the office. It is important for your doctor to understand how limiting your health concern is, since you will be asking him or her to fill out forms in support of your long-term disability claim.
Practical Steps Before Resigning
If your health is forcing you to consider leaving your job, these steps can help protect your interests:
- Review your benefit plan documents. Locate copies of your disability insurance policies and review them to understand what is considered a disabling condition. You can also consult with an attorney at Springer Ayeni for an analysis of your policy’s particular terms and conditions.
- Secure medical documentation. Ask your treating physicians to take down detailed records of your condition and its impact on your job performance, so that your medical records tell the complete story of your impairment.
- Consider disability benefits applications before resigning. Filing while still actively employed can preserve eligibility under ERISA plans.
- Consult with an attorney. Legal advice can help you strategize the best way to step back from working, and what might be needed for a successful long-term disability claim.
Emotional and Practical Considerations
Leaving a job for health reasons is not just a legal or financial matter; it is also an emotional one. Many employees struggle with guilt, fear of stigma, or anxiety about the future. The National Institute of Mental Health provides resources for coping with mental health challenges.2 Organizations like NAMI offer peer support groups for individuals facing job loss due to illness.3 Seeking support can make the transition less isolating.
Bringing It All Together
Leaving a job due to health reasons is rarely a simple decision. Whether the challenge is physical illness, injury, or mental health, the consequences affect every aspect of life. Understanding legal protections, evaluating disability benefits, and taking the right steps before resigning can safeguard both your financial security and your peace of mind.
At Springer Ayeni, APLC, we have spent more than two decades helping professionals navigate this difficult crossroads. If you are facing the possibility of leaving work due to health concerns, we are here to provide clear advice, protect your rights, and support you through the transition.
References:
1 Disability Statistics. Council for Disability Income Awareness.
https://thecdia.org/disability-statistics/
2 Caring for Your Mental Health. National Institute of Mental Health.
https://www.nimh.nih.gov/health/topics/caring-for-your-mental-health.
3 Workforce: Peer Support Workers. National Alliance on Mental Illness. https://www.nami.org/advocacy/policy-priorities/improving-health/workforce-peer support-workers/
Read More
I’m a Physician with a Disability—What Can I Do to Protect Myself?
As a physician, you’re trained to solve complex problems under pressure. You have worked hard for your career, and probably never expected to have to stop working due to a disability. Perhaps you applied on your own for those benefits and the insurance carrier denied your claim, or perhaps you’re beginning the process of applying for long-term disability insurance benefits. What can cause highly educated medical professionals to lose their long-term disability appeals?
It’s not a lack of intelligence. And it’s definitely not because you’re “not really disabled.”
In my work representing physicians and other high-income professionals, I’ve seen a frustrating pattern: doctors who rightfully file for disability benefits are denied just as frequently (and sometimes more so) as people who are not trained in medicine.
Here’s what’s going wrong, and how you can protect your livelihood and your future.
- Doctors are often treated on an informal basis by their colleagues
Any professional with a large network of trusted colleagues will turn to them first when something in their field goes wrong. That’s a given, and I get it. My father was a general practitioner from 1969 until 2021, when he passed away, and he was my first, and often only, phone call when I or my family had a medical concern. However, these initial, informal phone calls and diagnoses don’t make it into your medical records. So while you may have a months- or years-long history of seeking medical advice for your ailment, the medical records may look as though you just started treatment for a condition that has now become disabling. My first task with any of my clients in the medical field is to request their complete relevant medical records, so that I can ascertain how supported their disability is within the records that the insurer will review. And if those records are incomplete or sparse, I develop a strategy, through declarations, letters, or any other means, to make sure that the true course of treatment is documented in the long-term disability claim file.
- Insurers may use narrow definitions of “Disabled” for doctors
If you’re a surgeon who can’t operate anymore, that may seem clearly disabling to you. But your policy might say otherwise—especially if it’s a group policy through your hospital or medical group.
Many doctors are shocked to learn that their policy allows the insurer to deny benefits if they can do any work in a related field, such as consulting or teaching.
What to do: Get a copy of your full policy—not just the summary. A legal review by Springer Ayeni can help uncover how your “own occupation” is actually defined.
- Doctors may think it’s better to scale back to part-time rather than filing a disability benefit claim
In my experience, physicians and other professionals who have dedicated their lives to developing their expertise through education and practice, are incredibly determined to hang onto even part of their work rather than file a claim under disability insurance policies. Why? Because you have worked for your entire life to become a physician, and you may have even set that personal goal when you were just a child. My father never retired as a physician, and even when he became frail and sick, he kept working, forsaking all else, until shortly before he passed. For those of us who truly enjoy helping others in our profession, we may not even contemplate retirement, let alone leaving the practice much earlier than expected due to a disability.
Unfortunately, long-term disability insurers often operate under what I have dubbed the “hit by a bus theory,” where one day you are fully capable of performing your job without limitation, then you get “hit by a bus,” and the next day you are disabled. Most disabilities are not so straightforward, and many physicians continue working as long as they can with progressive disabilities,.
If you have strived in your profession for years and years, then your medical condition causes you to lose some capacity, you might start by scaling back your hours, or switching to more administrative tasks. Before making this kind of career move, please give me a call at 510-926-6768, so I can discuss the strategy of whether you might qualify for long-term disability benefits, and what the impact of switching job duties or reducing hours might be on an eventual disability claim.
What to do: Call me to discuss your disability and the terms of your benefit plan as soon as possible so that you can develop a strategy for whether, and how, you might either scale back your duties, file for disability benefits to replace your lost income, or both. Ironically, disability insurers often scrutinize partial disability claims harder than total disability claims, seeming to punish those who have tried heroically to keep working despite disabling limitations. I am here to help and advise, and I encourage you to let me help you make an informed decision about reducing your hours or filing a disability claim.
- Medical Records or Treating Physician Forms Alone Usually Aren’t Enough
Insurers don’t just want to know your diagnosis. They want to see how your condition limits your ability to perform your specific job duties. In the ultimate “gotcha,” however, insurance forms for treating physicians to fill out either don’t ask the right question (“how”) or don’t leave enough room for your doctor to answer that question thoroughly. Stating an ICD Code and a condition, like “long-COVID,” “Parkinson’s Disease,” “Mild Cognitive Disorder,” “Major Depressive Disorder,” or “Migraine,” etc., is insufficient to prevail on a claim for disability benefits. You and your doctor need to explain how your condition affects your ability to specific tasks in your practice, such as stand during rounds, hold your arms in the correct position during surgery, respond adequately to emergencies, work a nightshift or be on-call, or manage a high-stress practice.
What I suggest: Work with your treating doctor to create a detailed functional report—not just a chart note, by writing down a list of what specific job duties are affected by your disability, and going over that list with your treating physician. It’s best if your medical records can be as detailed as possible about what you are unable to do at work. Also, the boxes on insurance forms are not a limitation! Put in an asterisk and attach a supplemental page or 2 to submit as much helpful information as possible.
- Doctors Are Prime Targets for Surveillance
High-income professionals like doctors are often watched, because they are expensive claims for the insurer to pay. A short video of you walking, driving a distance longer than your restrictions permit, shopping in a store, or attending your child’s sports game can be twisted to argue you’re not truly disabled.
What to do: Make sure all of your social media settings are set to “private.” Be mindful of what you do in public and what your restrictions and limitations are. Be honest in disclosing your actual activities on forms. For example, if your physician has recommended exercise to improve your disabling conditions, make sure you state on your application or update forms what you do and why it was prescribed by your doctor. If benefits have been denied, be sure to request and review all surveillance footage so that you can include context for what was actually happening on that day. Judges ultimately appreciate context, and understand that there may be anomalous events that do not necessarily mean that you can return to the full-time practice of medicine. While insurers may be looking for a “gotcha,” have faith that most judges are wise enough to see the big picture.
- ERISA is brutally technical
The ERISA process has strict rules. You often get only one appeal to submit your evidence, and it must be submitted by a specific date or you lose your right to the claim. Moreover, if you miss including key documents, you may not have the chance to get that evidence in front of the court if you later go to court.
What to do: Don’t wait until after your appeal is denied to consult a lawyer. The best time to get legal help is before you submit your appeal—when there’s still time to shape the record. Reach out to me at www.benefitslaw.com or 510-926-6768 and I would be happy to discuss your specific issue with you in more detail.
Read More
The Elephant in the Room: Can AI Really Handle Your ERISA Disability Claim and Appeal?
Why Turning to a Bot for Legal Advice Could Hurt Your Claim—And What You Deserve Instead
Let’s be honest: more and more people are asking AI tools like ChatGPT or Google’s Gemini how to appeal a denied disability claim before they ever think of calling a lawyer.
I get it. AI is fast. It’s available 24/7. It doesn’t require talking with a live person about the difficult details of your health. And, of course, AI is free or low-cost.
But when your financial stability and health are on the line, you need to know the full truth: AI is not a substitute for experienced legal counsel. In fact, trusting AI blindly could do more harm than good.
As someone who has spent 23 years representing clients in ERISA disability cases, I’m not here to bash technology. There is much to gain from the efficiency of evolving technology and I am certainly not advocating AI abstinence. I am here, however, to lay out the risks, differences, and reasons why having a compassionate, strategic, and knowledgeable attorney matters for something as critical to your financial health as your long-term disability benefits.
Why People Turn to AI—and Where It Falls Short
If you type into ChatGPT:
“How do I appeal a denied ERISA disability claim?”
You’ll probably get something like this:
“Request your claim file. Review the denial letter. Submit additional medical evidence. Write an appeal within 180 days.” You might even get general “advice” about including medical records and statements in support of your appeal. However, even AI knows its own limitations. A common Bot disclaimer goes something like this:
“Generative AI features are not intended for professional advice. Do not use generative AI features to seek or provide legal, medical, financial, or other kinds of professional advice or any opinions, judgments, or recommendations without conducting your own independent consultation or research. Generative AI features cannot replace advice provided by a qualified professional and do not form any such relationship (e.g., attorney-client relationship).” (https://www.adobe.com/legal/licenses-terms/adobe-gen-ai-user-guidelines.html)
Even tech giants know that the disclaimer is necessary because AI advice is not strategic, not confidential, not detailed, and, in fact, is dangerously simplistic.
For example, AI does not, and cannot, analyze whether your plan’s language requires a de novo or abuse of discretion standard of review in court; whether the facts of your case meet the definition of disability under your plan language; whether the insurer has disclosed all required information in its claim file; whether there is evidence of biased claims handling in your file; whether the insurer has calculated offsets accurately in your case; what evidence in the claim file needs to be rebutted in an appeal; what the likelihood of settlement and possible settlement amount in litigation might be. The list goes on and on. These are the kinds of distinctions that change the outcome of a case—and they’re not in an AI’s toolbox.
The bottom line: AI gives you non-confidential general advice. Springer Ayeni gives you a legal strategy based on decades of experience handling ERISA long-term disability cases.
AI “Hallucinations” and Fake Law: A Dangerous Trend
AI tools are known for hallucinating legal citations—that is, making up case law that sounds real but isn’t. See https://hai.stanford.edu/news/ai-trial-legal-models-hallucinate-1-out-6-or-more-benchmarking-queries I’ve read up on examples of how AI will generate completely fictitious case references and quotes from decisions that don’t exist. This isn’t just sloppy, it’s dangerous.
First, if you submit an appeal letter to an insurer or judge citing bogus cases, you undermine your credibility. Second, insisting that there are cases in your favor when you reach out to an attorney, when those cases are entirely fictious (unbeknownst to you), will make an attorney hesitant to offer to represent you. Attorneys and their clients should be on the same team at all times. Most importantly, you won’t even know when AI has done you dirty with a fictitious citation, because it often sounds right and the wrong cases are mixed right in with actual cases.
The bottom line: Legal writing is not just writing. It’s advocacy, precision, and ethics. AI is still a baby in the world of law, and cannot be trusted to do actual legal research.
AI Is NOT Confidential, and that Can Put You at Risk
AI is not a lawyer. It doesn’t form an attorney-client relationship, as all of the tech User Guidelines state. That means:
- There is no legal confidentiality. What you input may be stored, analyzed, or even discoverable later.
- You might waive privilege by sharing facts about your medical condition, employment, or insurer. Moreover, AI remembers your input from search to search, so even if you don’t share all the facts in one session, it may know a lot more about you, your condition, your family, your history, your dreams, and your goals from all of the data you have input in previous searches.
- There is no duty of loyalty. AI doesn’t protect your interests—it just completes a task. For example, when Chat GPT conversations are shared, Google produces those conversations as “results” upon a simple search. See https://cybernews.com/ai-news/chatgpt-shared-links-privacy-leak/
As an attorney, I never input confidential client information into AI platforms. Doing so risks ethical breaches and the security of your case. Some lawyers are misusing AI and unknowingly exposing clients. That’s not how I work.
If I use AI at all, it’s only for mundane administrative tasks—not for case strategy, legal analysis, or communication.
The bottom line: Your trust is sacred. And your privacy is non-negotiable. AI will not protect you and advocate for you like a good attorney will.
A Real Appeal Tells the Real Story—Not Just the Medical One
An AI might focus only on lab results and doctor notes. But I know that winning a disability appeal requires telling your whole story, not just summarizing medical visits. It also requires understanding the law and how it applies to the facts of your case, and being able to spot and rebut flaws in the insurer’s claims handling and medical reviews.
I listen for and translate the truths that often don’t make it into a medical file, like how your fatigue crashes your productivity by noon, or how your brain fog makes multi-step tasks impossible not just at work but in your everyday life, or how your anxiety prevents you from completing your tasks efficiently, or even how you have good days and bad days, requiring you to rest for days if you have over-exerted yourself on a good day.
I draw out the details of your daily life, your work history, and your limitations, and I explain them clearly and persuasively to the insurance company. This isn’t something a chatbot can do. It takes time, training, empathy, experience, and sound judgment.
The bottom line: I’m not just reviewing records. I’m building your narrative, filling gaps in the file, rebutting arguments, and fighting for your future.
AI Can’t Show Up for You. I Will.
Some pundits say AI will replace lawyers. I do think that technology can make lawyers more efficient at administrative tasks that take away from time spent on actual cases. However, the best lawyers, those who listen, advocate, strategize, work as a team with their client, and ultimately are successful in cases, cannot ever be replaced by a bot. Technology will evolve, but compassion, reputation, and results still matter.
When you retain me, you’re not getting a script. You’re getting:
- 23 years of ERISA disability experience
- Strategic, circuit-specific legal knowledge
- A reputation for success and tenacity among colleagues, insurers, and opposing counsel
- A teammate who sees you as more than a claim number
- A fierce advocate who will not ignore you or reduce you to a piece of datum that will influence future actions
The bottom line: You deserve someone who understands not just the law, but the weight of what’s at stake. You deserve someone who knows how to get results and treats you with dignity along the way.
Final Word: Don’t Trust a Bot with Your Livelihood
AI has its place, but not as your attorney. Not when your disability benefits, your financial survival, and your mental and physical health are on the line.
Before you go down a rabbit hole of chatbot answers, talk to someone who’s been through this hundreds of times, someone who won’t hallucinate law, who respects your privacy, and who knows how to win an appeal, not just write about it.
Contact Springer Ayeni today. Let’s protect what matters most—your income, your dignity, your future.
Springer Ayeni: Compassion. Reputation. Results.
www.benefitslaw.com
ERISA Basic Virtual Conference by ABA Joint Committee
Please join me, my program co-chairs, panelists, and participants at the American Bar Association Joint Committee on Employee Benefits’ “ERISA Basics” Virtual Conference that will take place from December 7-10, 2020! This year covers series of discussions that span Business Law, Health Law, Labor and Employment Law, Real Property, Trust and Estate Law, Taxation, Tort Trial and Insurance Practice.
To sign up: https://www.americanbar.org/events-cle/mtg/web/403621552/
Or contact: Cassie Springer Ayeni, President of Springer Ayeni, A Professional Law Corporation @www.benefitslaw.com
#ABA #JCEB #ERISA #Employeedisabilitybenefits #disablity #ERISAlawyer #Superlawyer #Disabilityclaims #Disabilityappeals #Longtermdisability #ERISAlitigator #ERISAbayarea #Disabilitylawyer #Employeebenefitslawyer #ERISAlawfirm #SpringerAyeni #benefitslaw
Read More
Joint Agency Rule Extend Disability Appeal Deadline in COVID
Congratulations to my co-worker, Claire Kennedy-Wilkins for her thoughtful and insightful article
“Joint Agency Action Automatically Extends Group Disability Appeal Deadlines
During the COVID-19 Pandemic.” In these times, it is great to know that EBSA
and DOL are aware of the added burden on disability plan participants to gather
information for appeals of denied claims and have acted in the interest of
these participants.
#Coviddisability#ABA#erisalawyer#erisabayarea#ERISA#springerayeni#disabilityappeals
https://www.americanbar.org/groups/labor_law/publications/ebc_news_archive/issue-spring-2020/joint-agency-action/
ERISA Basics National Institute 6-Part Webinar Series
June 15th – 17th 2020, I will be speaking on two Employee Benefits Claims panels at the American Bar Association Joint Committee on Employee Benefits sponsored – ERISA Basics National Institute 6-Part Webinar Series. On the panels, I will present: 1) Statutory Overview and 2) Benefit Claims: Administrative Procedures & Litigation. The great news is that – it is virtual! Now you can join in without the burden of travel! #silverlinings. I look forward to the discussions, questions, and sharing of insights/ideas.
For more, see event details: https://www.americanbar.org/events-cle/mtg/web/394126606/
Or contact: Cassie Springer Ayeni, President of Springer Ayeni, A Professional Law Corporation @ www.benefitslaw.com
#JCEB #EBC #ABA #ERISA #Employeedisabilitybenefits #disablity #ERISAlawyer #Superlawyer #Disabilityclaims #Disabilityappeals #Longtermdisability #ERISAlitigator #ERISAbayarea #Disabilitylawyer #Employeebenefitslawyer #ERISAlawfirm #SpringerAyeni #benefitslaw #presenter
Cassie Springer Ayeni Named SuperLawyer 6 Years in a Row
For the 6th consecutive year, Cassie Springer Ayeni has been named a SuperLawyers Top 50 Women Attorney for Northern California, and a Top 100 Attorney for the 5th consecutive year. She has been named to the SuperLawyers list for her expertise in employee benefits for 8 consecutive years.
Read More
Incoming chair message to Employee Benefits Committee
So much has happened in these few months since I wrote this message to the Employee Benefits Committee as one of its incoming co-chairs. Since then, we had a successful midwinter meeting in Rancho Mirage, but none of us knew that would likely be our last travel occasion for the foreseeable future. Here’s a blast from the near past, which feels like a lifetime ago:
Read More
Here’s a blast from the near past, which feels like a lifetime ago
So much has happened in these few months since I wrote this message to the Employee Benefits Committee as one of its incoming co-chairs. Since then, we had a successful midwinter meeting in Rancho Mirage, but none of us knew that would likely be our last travel occasion for the foreseeable future. Here’s a blast from the near past, which feels like a lifetime ago:
Read More
Springer Ayeni Wins Disability Case Against Aetna
Even in tough times, we are grateful for the hard-working judges and court personnel who continue to decide cases and keep the wheels of justice turning. On March 24, 2020, the attorneys at Springer Ayeni achieved a victory for our client, a man disabled by shoulder pain and denied disability benefits by Aetna Life Insurance Company. Judge Chesney of the Northern District of California ordered benefits paid for Mr. Shaikh’s own occupation and remanded for a determination on the amount. The Court found that Aetna “overly focused” on objective medical evidence and “essentially disregarded” Mr. Shaikh’s credible complaints of pain. Springer Ayeni is now pursuing attorney fees against Aetna. https://law.justia.com/cases/federal/district-courts/california/candce/3:2018cv04394/329565/46/
Read More