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Does return to work mean you lose SSD benefits?

July 24, 2013 by Rosalind Joffe 1 Comment

Twenty years ago, I was on SSDI for several years.  When I felt well enough to try returning to the workforce, I  worried I’d lose my benefits and not have the health to work.  I did it anyway and it worked out for me.  But I wish that the Return to Work program was available then.  It would have made the transition a lot less worrisome. I’m told things are different now.

This post was contributed by Molly Clarke, the Social Media Coordinator for Social Security Disability Help.  She  contributes regularly to the Social Security Disability Help Blog. 

 

Returning to work after receiving disability benefits can be overwhelming and confusing. While most people would prefer to regain their health and return to work, many don’t know where to start and worry about losing the safety net of disability benefits. If you find yourself facing these circumstances, the Social Security Administration (SSA) has implemented several incentive programs to ease your transition back into the workforce. This makes it possible for disabled workers to return to work slowly without having to jeopardize their benefits.

The following article will provide step-by-step instructions to help you get back to work.

 

OVERVIEW

The SSA’s primary work incentive program is called “Ticket to Work”. This program was started as a way to remove the barriers that were preventing SSD recipients from returning to work.  This program offers the following services:

• Job training to teach you how to perform different types of work that will be less impacted by your health condition.
• Job referrals
• Vouchers or credits to cover work-related expenses like transportation fees or assistive technology.
• Continuation of SSDI, SSI, Medicare, and Medicaid benefits while partaking in the program.
• Suspension of continuing disability reviews while partaking in the program.
• A “Trial Work Period” during which you can attempt to work without jeopardizing your benefits.

 

TRIAL WORK PERIOD

One of the most useful aspect of Ticket to Work program is trial work period.   If you choose to partake in the trial work period, you will continue to receive benefits regularly for nine months.  You should note that a month will only count toward your trial work period if you earn $750.  The months of your trial work period do not need to be consecutive.  It will only end after you’ve earned at least $750 in nine months within a five year period.  This security will allow you to return to work without losing your benefits if your work attempt fails.

During your trial work period, you must provide the SSA with the following information:
• Changes in your hours or work schedule
• Changes in your assigned duties or pay
• Expenses used to accommodate your return to work, including things like assistive devices and transportation fees.
You can report these changes in person, by fax, or by calling your local Social Security office

 

AFTER YOUR TRIAL WORK PERIOD

Once your trial work period is complete, the SSA will evaluate your ability to earn Substantial Gainful Activity—or SGA.  In 2013, SGA is $1,040 per month.  If your average earnings during your trial work period average or exceed SGA, your benefits will be discontinued.  If your earnings do not exceed SGA, you will continue to receive your benefits.

At the end of your trial work period you will enter what is known as an, “Extended Period of Eligibility”, or EPE. EPE lasts a total of 36 months. During this time, your SSDI benefit will be determined on a monthly basis. Months in which you exceed SGA you will not receive a check.  Months in which you do not exceed SGA you will receive your benefits.  After the EPE is complete, your benefits will be terminated the first month in which your income exceeds SGA.

If, after the EPE, your benefits are discontinued and you cannot continue to work, you will have access to expedited reinstatement of your benefits. You can file for expedited reinstatement within five years after your benefits are initially terminated. While waiting for your expedited claim to be processed, the SSA will provide you with disability benefits for 6 months while they determine whether or not you still meet the eligibility requirements.

If you are ready to return to work, you should contact the SSA to learn more about the available work incentives and to see exactly how your benefits will be affected.

For more information, visit Social Security Disability Help  (http://www.disability-benefits-help.org/glossary/ticket-to-work) or contact Molly Clarke at  mac@ssd-help.org .

Filed Under: Working with chronic illness

Are you the cause of your chronic illness?

July 10, 2013 by Rosalind Joffe 15 Comments

NOTE:  This is a guest post written by a former teacher who left  work due to serious health problems and is currently building her own business as a copy editor. Recently I came across an article in The Guardian,   “Top five regrets of the dying.”    In it, the author describes “regrets people haveRead More

Filed Under: Attitude, Musings on LIfe with Chronic Illness

6 Questions that Create Clarity for Change

June 19, 2013 by Rosalind Joffe Leave a Comment

How do you know when it’s the right time to make a change?  What can we do to make it as smooth as possible and to ensure that the change achieves what it’s meant to do? Some level of change is  a constant in anyone’s life.  Just think of the weather.  But clearly, there areRead More

Filed Under: Attitude

Is Working Good for Your Health?

May 22, 2013 by Rosalind Joffe 2 Comments

Twenty years ago,  at age 42 and after 22 years of continuous employment,  I exited the workforce.  I’d been living with a diagnosed illness and then second one for 13 years.  But I had never made any conscious choices regarding my career plan based on my increasingly limited health.  Now within a matter of weeks,Read More

Filed Under: Attitude, BOOK - Women Work and Autoimmune Disease, Career Development, Musings on LIfe with Chronic Illness, Working with chronic illness

What keeps you from addressing the challenges?

May 7, 2013 by Rosalind Joffe 3 Comments

The email asked why I limited my new program, Kickstart, to  ‘young adults”, ages 20-30.   Really? The age designation isn’t intended to limit anyone.  I did this as my own personal ‘shout out’  to young people.  Why?  Because the opportunity for change is that much greater when you’re starting out, less encumbered by personalRead More

Filed Under: Attitude, Job hunting, Working with chronic illness, Young with Health Problems

20-something Facing Health Challenges? Kickstart Your Career, Now

April 25, 2013 by Rosalind Joffe 6 Comments

  It’s never easy to live with a debilitating chronic health condition.  But when you’re in your 20’s and 30’s,  it’s particularly difficult. Why?  Because everyone else is  “living the life ”  that’s expected —   launching careers, building long term relationships, planting seeds for a promising future. Meanwhile,  you’re juggling health appointments with unpredictable, demandingRead More

Filed Under: Career Development, Young with Health Problems

In the Kingdom of the Sick

April 11, 2013 by Rosalind Joffe 2 Comments

When I developed a urinary tract infection and numb fingers at age 27, I didn’t know that these were the first signs of what would become a lifetime with chronic illnesses.  Two years later, severe fatigue and optic neuritis led to the multiple sclerosis (MS) diagnosis.  I had no idea what it would mean .  OverRead More

Filed Under: Attitude, Musings on LIfe with Chronic Illness, Working with chronic illness

Illness leading to "wavy" career history? LinkedIn

April 3, 2013 by Rosalind Joffe 4 Comments

This guest post contribution is from Richard Munn. Recruitment has been going increasingly digitised in recent times.  No matter what sector, there are plenty of opportunities to be found online, whether it is through virtual career fairs or by being part of professional social networks such as LinkedIn. A profile on LinkedIn is like aRead More

Filed Under: Job hunting

when affirmation isn't enough

March 20, 2013 by Rosalind Joffe Leave a Comment

Last week, I was feeling down in the dumps.  I couldn’t shake my  mood.  I tried my usual bag of tricks but I couldn’t lift myself out of  gloom, which is not typical at all for me.  Finally, on my weekly call with my Focusing partner, I sensed it:  I actually don’t like myself whenRead More

Filed Under: Attitude

Young and planning career with chronic illness?

March 4, 2013 by Rosalind Joffe Leave a Comment

This post first appeared last week on Big Tent Jobs – Don’t know it?  It’s a value laden site created by 2 people who are mission driven!   My thanks to Adam for giving me the chance to speak to his readers.   “What do you want to be when you grow up?” Did youRead More

Filed Under: Attitude, Career Development, Young with Health Problems

Don't you want to read about The Last Best Cure?

February 21, 2013 by Rosalind Joffe 2 Comments

I don’t typically post about a book publication but Donna Jackason Nakazawa’s work is unique. Today is the official pub date for her new book, The Last Best Cure. “The Last Best Cure will change lives; it may even save some.” –Katrina Kenison, author of The Gift of an Ordinary Day “This is a genuine page-turningRead More

Filed Under: Attitude, Health Info, Talking about it

Do people judge your book by your cover?

February 11, 2013 by Rosalind Joffe 4 Comments

She was having a bad health day with debilitating ulcerative colitis symptoms when a coworker commented,  “I hope you feel as good as you look.” My client shared  this with me because she was surprised by how good it felt to hear this.   At least, she said, someone wasn’t making assumptions based on howRead More

Filed Under: Musings on LIfe with Chronic Illness, Talking about it

Is it harder to keep a job with a chronic illness?

January 24, 2013 by Rosalind Joffe 11 Comments

“Do people with chronic health problems have different challenges from those who are healthy in keeping their jobs?”    This question came from a journalist who had told me he didn’t personally know anyone with a chronic illness.  (Really?) Not sure where to start,  I gave him examples. Let’s imagine  Susie Q.  A  healthy 30Read More

Filed Under: Attitude, Musings on LIfe with Chronic Illness, Talking about it, Working for others, Working with chronic illness

3 career building ideas if you're young with health problems

January 10, 2013 by Rosalind Joffe 5 Comments

In the early years of  living with auto immune diseases,  I  felt completely out of step with people my age.  I had more in common with my  grandparents  and their friends than other 20 and 30 somethings. At 29 and married one month,  I was  bedridden and lost vision in one eye (multiple sclerosis).  ThatRead More

Filed Under: Career Development, Talking about it, Working with chronic illness, Young with Health Problems

College choice when living with chronic health problems

January 2, 2013 by Rosalind Joffe 4 Comments

Today’s GUEST POST is by Melissa Woodson.   Chronic illness is an important issue for more college students than most people realize. For those preparing for higher education, health problems shouldn’t stop you from achieving your goals.  Preparation, planning and education are essential tools in your college success. Unpredictable waxing and waning symptoms can meanRead More

Filed Under: Young with Health Problems

New Year and a New Job?

December 19, 2012 by Rosalind Joffe 3 Comments

I like to make my ‘holiday’ post relevant to the season.   So, in the midst of my own health issues,  the resulting work issues and multiple other demands this time of year,  I’ve been thinking on what to write about. I decided that it’s enough with the posts filled with reflection and questions.  EnoughRead More

Filed Under: Career Development, Job hunting, Working with chronic illness

Is Fear Changing Your Game?

December 5, 2012 by Rosalind Joffe 2 Comments

He described the terror  that wakes him:   multiple sclerosis  will paralyze him and he’ll lose his job and his family.  For the first time since we’d started working together a few months earlier,  Paul (not his real name) described his palpable pain. Until then, Paul had been consistently upbeat and pragmatic focusing on the changesRead More

Filed Under: Attitude, Musings on LIfe with Chronic Illness

An Asset when returning to work: mHealth Apps

November 19, 2012 by Rosalind Joffe Leave a Comment

The following GUEST POST describes recent innovations in devices that improve the way healthcare providers  and patients with chronic illnesses can interact.   Mobile health applications are making it easier for doctors to disseminate care, affording efficiency in the office as well as lessening the amount of times that chronically ill individuals need to visit.Read More

Filed Under: Health Info, Working with chronic illness

3 Questions that can help you get what you want

November 5, 2012 by Rosalind Joffe Leave a Comment

It’s my experience that living with chronic health problems  creates a generalized sense of  dis-empowerment.   When you can’t control your health, it’s a slippery slope to losing your sense of control over what you can and can’t do, quicksand where you feel completely powerless. Do you find yourself stuck doing the same thing overRead More

Filed Under: Attitude, Musings on LIfe with Chronic Illness, Working with chronic illness

Singing the chronic illness blues?

October 15, 2012 by Rosalind Joffe 14 Comments

If there were a blues song about living with chronic bad health, I bet most people wouldn’t sing about ‘love gone bad’.   No doubt, holding onto relationships is hard with chronically bad health.  I’ve worked with people who blame illness for failed relationships and there’s much to be sad about. But from what I’ve seen,Read More

Filed Under: Attitude, Musings on LIfe with Chronic Illness, Talking about it, Working with chronic illness

Who is your best advocate?

September 28, 2012 by Rosalind Joffe 9 Comments

The chronically ill need advocates.  This past week, , Jennifer Jaff, a valuable figure in the legal rights world for the chronically ill died from  ‘complications from crohn’s disease’.   She’d learned in childhood about living with difficult, unpredictable illness. Jennifer Jaff was  smart and dedicated to her task.  A ground breaker in many ways,  the services  she providedRead More

Filed Under: Attitude, Musings on LIfe with Chronic Illness

7 Big Ideas for Regaining Your Workplace Power

September 12, 2012 by Rosalind Joffe Leave a Comment

This week is Invisible Illness Week 12.   This yearly event offers online seminars focusing on issues that people with invisible illness face. I’m a big fan of the idea that there is information we can share among all of us living with invisible chronic conditions.  Notice the words:  invisible (symptoms are not visibly obvious),Read More

Filed Under: Attitude, Musings on LIfe with Chronic Illness, Working with chronic illness

5 Ideas for Talking about Illness and Your Performance

August 23, 2012 by Rosalind Joffe 2 Comments

(Name and details have been changed to protect privacy) Patty struggled at work with disclosure and the on-going communication around her health challenges.   She lives with chronic migraines and an immune deficiency and had been experiencing  increasingly debilitating symptoms for the past six years.  Patty   struggled with knowing when is the appropriate timeRead More

Filed Under: Attitude, Talking about it, Working for others, Working with chronic illness

Just sayin'

August 8, 2012 by Rosalind Joffe 11 Comments

Living with a chronic health problem can be awfully  isolating.  Likely, even if you’re the most social person, there’s no one with whom you can  share your daily challenges.  You might think it would be easier if you could find someone who also has these challenges.  But there’s this —    mutual sharing of healthRead More

Filed Under: Attitude, Musings on LIfe with Chronic Illness, Talking about it

Do you know what will keep you healthy?

July 25, 2012 by Rosalind Joffe 3 Comments

Do people tell you that if you were only more positive and could look at the bright side,  you’d be healthier?  Your bad attitude is  hurting you.  I remember when I told my obstetrician that people were telling me that I wouldn’t get pregnant (we’d been trying for 2 years) as long as I keptRead More

Filed Under: Attitude, Musings on LIfe with Chronic Illness, Working with chronic illness

Are you optimist or pessimist?

July 18, 2012 by Rosalind Joffe 2 Comments

Do you ever wonder why some people get the breaks that make them successful and others don’t?  No doubt, living with  a chronic illness can lead you down this path.   When I read Breaking Murphy’s Law: How Optimists Get What They Want from Life and Pessimists Can Too, by Suzanne Segerstrom, some of my  ideasRead More

Filed Under: Attitude, Musings on LIfe with Chronic Illness

How springy are you?

June 25, 2012 by Rosalind Joffe 3 Comments

Last week, it was the 1st heat wave of the summer and I was seriously drooping.  Just walking to my car in the sun knocked me out. Prior to the first mutiple sclerosis episode 32 years ago, heat wasn’t an issue.  Since then,  I melt in heat and my function drops dramatically. But here’s theRead More

Filed Under: Attitude, BOOK - Women Work and Autoimmune Disease, Musings on LIfe with Chronic Illness

Talking about illness: Suggestions from the trenches

June 13, 2012 by Rosalind Joffe 2 Comments

I like featuring Guest Posts because it offers more perspectives on this subject that’s dear to all our hearts. This blog post is from Carla and I appreciate that she is sharing this with us all.   Example of having a conversation with a coworker while out to lunch: Coworker: Why aren’t you eating yourRead More

Filed Under: Talking about it, Working for others, Working with chronic illness

What's your glass: half empty or half full?

June 4, 2012 by Rosalind Joffe 2 Comments

Do you find yourself pondering on your essential approach to life?  Probably it’s not a daily recurrence (or I hope not).  But this thought could be  helpful if you’re engaged in trying to change some deeply rooted patterns. In  her column, A Richer Life By Seeing the Glass Half  Full , Jane Brody,  The NewRead More

Filed Under: Attitude, Musings on LIfe with Chronic Illness

Are you using your resources carefully?

May 29, 2012 by Rosalind Joffe 8 Comments

It’s been over 30 days since I posted my last blog!    Lest you think that I’m either not a serious blogger or a slacker, this was no accident. Are you living with chronic health conditions that shake you in your core and  often make it harder to get  anything done?  If you’ve been readingRead More

Filed Under: Attitude, Health Info, Working with chronic illness

Are you stuck in checkmate conversation?

April 25, 2012 by Rosalind Joffe 6 Comments

Does a debilitating chronic health condition overwhelm you to the point  that dealing with other people feels like a burden that you just can’t carry? People tell me that they’re stuck and can’t get what they need from others so they can keep working.  It’s like they’re  stuck in ‘checkmate’  with no moves left toRead More

Filed Under: Attitude, Talking about it, Working for others, Working with chronic illness

Can you find a new job with bad health?

April 2, 2012 by Rosalind Joffe 28 Comments

“Can you tell me how I should look for a new job when I’ve  been told that I have to leave my job because of my bad health?”   I’d say that’s a tough one, wouldn’t you?  Esther is angry, feels totally alone and is really scared.  Seems understandable to me. As it turns out,Read More

Filed Under: Attitude, Career Development, Musings on LIfe with Chronic Illness, Working with chronic illness

Work Matters But Not Easy to Make Happen

March 19, 2012 by Rosalind Joffe 6 Comments

  I’ve been writing about working while living with chronic illness for more than 10 years.   People ask me how I come up with topics?  Really? Think about it.   When was the last time you found a character in a book,  play, movie or t.v. show who was dealing with chronic health challenges?  ThisRead More

Filed Under: Career Development, Health Info, Job hunting, Musings on LIfe with Chronic Illness, Working with chronic illness

Is Obamacare Good For You?

March 1, 2012 by Rosalind Joffe 2 Comments

This post was written by Tiffany Wallace exclusively for WorkingWithChronicIllness.  All content for informational and educational purposes only.  I am not an expert in this area so I’m grateful for her effort and hope that the information  is useful to you! Affordable medical insurance  is a major consideration for many people, particularly those who liveRead More

Filed Under: Health Info

What Is It? How Did I Get It?

February 17, 2012 by Rosalind Joffe Leave a Comment

I  ‘interviewed’   Gail Rae, author of  What Is It And How Did I Get It?   Early Stage Chronic Kidney Disease.   I find her thoughts useful  and thought provoking.  How can you apply this  to your own life and the choices you make?   Rosalind:  I found your book so compelling.  It brought meRead More

Filed Under: Musings on LIfe with Chronic Illness, Working with chronic illness

Are You Like Mr. Bates or Mrs. Patmore?

February 1, 2012 by Rosalind Joffe 5 Comments

Struggling to stay at your new job while living with chronic health conditions? Struggling to keep your job while living with a chronic health condition? Then you might want to tune into Downton Abbey, Season 1,  to see what to do and what to avoid . Maybe they should make a series called, “Working andRead More

Filed Under: Attitude, Talking about it, Working for others, Working with chronic illness

Are you acting from confidence or fear?

January 17, 2012 by Rosalind Joffe 2 Comments

A former client sent me a Holiday e-card with  a note that she’d lost her job and with it, her family’s health insurance.   In follow up emails she told me that she was part of a lay off  last month,  she’s been feeling sicker since she’s left work and feels lost. She wants to work withRead More

Filed Under: Attitude, Musings on LIfe with Chronic Illness, Working with chronic illness

Can You Meet the Expectations You Set?

January 5, 2012 by Rosalind Joffe 7 Comments

When I woke in the middle of the night for the 3rd time to go to the bathroom (incontinence again!),  I found myself muttering.  Of course, the middle of the night is the worst time to think about anything, and I was panicking about what wouldn’t get done today.   One thing I’m good at isRead More

Filed Under: Attitude, Musings on LIfe with Chronic Illness, Working for others, Working with chronic illness

Do you let the 'to do' list rule your life?

December 16, 2011 by Rosalind Joffe 14 Comments

I got an email pointing out that I don’t have pain resources on my website.  This person said she  wanted to hire me to coach her in finding work.  But, she wrote, I obviously don’t know anything about living with pain since it’s missing from my site. She’s right that there’s not enough on myRead More

Filed Under: Attitude, Musings on LIfe with Chronic Illness

One person's story

December 1, 2011 by Rosalind Joffe 8 Comments

The following interview is with Sophie Lee who has published a book  about her life with Irritable Bowel Syndrome, IBS.  I find her  story compelling.  Does it resonate with you? Q:  What made you write this book?  A: More than anything, I just wanted to tell the truth about IBS. There are so many mythsRead More

Filed Under: Health Info, Musings on LIfe with Chronic Illness, Working with chronic illness

Do you think you can?

November 15, 2011 by Rosalind Joffe 4 Comments

The difference between a successful person and others is not a lack of strength, not a lack of knowledge, but rather a lack of will.   Vince Lombardi   Motivation and will power fascinate me. Maybe because I didn’t have much of either when I was young and then they each blossomed. Illness in my lateRead More

Filed Under: Attitude, Musings on LIfe with Chronic Illness

Thinking for yourself when thinking about work and chronic illness?

November 2, 2011 by Rosalind Joffe 6 Comments

What does it take for a person with chronic illness to continue working ?  And, if possible, to do so in a rewarding way?  I’ve wrestled with  this personally for over 30 years, and more recently in my professional life as a coach/writer/activist of sorts in the past 10 years. A recent New York TimesRead More

Filed Under: Attitude, Career Development, Working with chronic illness

Tips for Using Social Media in a Job Hunt

October 19, 2011 by Rosalind Joffe 1 Comment

The following is a guest blog by Erica Moss. Sites like Twitter, Facebook and LinkedIn can land you a job if used correctly — or ruin your chances if mishandled. The good news for those living with chronic illness is that these social networks make it easier than ever before to build a personal brand,Read More

Filed Under: Career Development, Working with chronic illness

Suggestions or advice? You choose.

October 13, 2011 by Rosalind Joffe Leave a Comment

Several recent emails have either asked for my ‘advice’ on a topic or  angered with the ‘advice’  I’d given.  Funny thing is — I don’t see myself in the business of giving advice,  either as a blogger/writer or in my coaching practice. So what’s this about?   I asked myself,  what does it mean ‘to giveRead More

Filed Under: BOOK - Women Work and Autoimmune Disease, Musings on LIfe with Chronic Illness, Talking about it

Do you need to talk about illness?

October 5, 2011 by Rosalind Joffe 7 Comments

(Names and details have been changed to protect privacy) Chronic illness can mean that we have to grow and change in ways we couldn’t have expected.  In my experience, the ability to communicate effectively is fundamental to being able to thrive, not just survive, when living with illness. One reason is that most symptoms fromRead More

Filed Under: BOOK - Women Work and Autoimmune Disease, Talking about it, Working with chronic illness

Is chronic illness stopping you from using yoga to boost performance?

September 16, 2011 by Rosalind Joffe 8 Comments

The following is a Guest Blog from Allison Gamble.   The health benefits of yoga have been well documented for years and known for centuries in some cultures. Recent research suggests that people with chronic illnesses may benefit from yoga. Of the many different forms of yoga, some are more beneficial for certain conditions thanRead More

Filed Under: Health Info, Working with chronic illness

Time for your new career?

September 8, 2011 by Rosalind Joffe 4 Comments

Debilitating chronic illness can lead to twisting career turns to accommodate waxing and waning symptoms.  Sometimes it means  “reinventing yourself”  to be able to keep working in some capacity. That was  my story.  After 25 years of working in multimedia  (photographer, producer, production company v.p. sales , public school communications teacher and college professor), IRead More

Filed Under: Career Development, Working with chronic illness

Saying goodbye

September 1, 2011 by Rosalind Joffe 19 Comments

Tomorrow we’re going to euthanize our beloved goldendoodle, Iko.   It’s very, very sad. He’s 7 1/2 years old and in his prime. The difficult thing about a dog that has developed a chronic illness that the vet tells us ‘fatal’ (diagnosis: protein losing enteropathy)  is knowing when it’s time to say goodbye.  I know aboutRead More

Filed Under: Musings on LIfe with Chronic Illness

LinkedIn and Illness

August 25, 2011 by Rosalind Joffe 4 Comments

Someone recently asked me how I generate ideas for blog posts.  Honestly,  I’m rarely at a loss. Just the other day, a Twitter follower DM’d me (that’s twitter-speak for sent me a direct and private message) asking if  I’d written a post on “whether or not to note one’s illness/involvement in an association on yourRead More

Filed Under: Career Development, Job hunting

Unpredictable: A synonym for chronic illness

August 10, 2011 by Rosalind Joffe 9 Comments

I don’t know how many times I’ve written the words, “Chronic illness is unpredictable in how and when it will show up”.   Each time I’m reminded of  it,  I shake my head in amazement.   Because it’s so true. I just celebrated my 60th birthday and a client (I’ll call her Laurie) was asking  what IRead More

Filed Under: Career Development, Musings on LIfe with Chronic Illness, Talking about it, Working for others, Working with chronic illness

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Rosalind Joffe

rosalind@cicoach.com

617.969.1930
How can I help you?
I specialize in working with professionals living with chronic health conditions who want to continue to thrive, not just survive. Learn more by clicking here.
Women, Work and
Autoimmune Disease: Keep Working Girlfriend!

by Rosalind Joffe
with Joan Friedlander
© 2025 Rosalind Joffe, ciCoach | Photograph by Meri Bond