If it's otherwise legal for your child to work, there shouldn't be any reason they couldn't.
Yes
If you are referring to the SSDI Child Benefit Check, no as it stops than.
Not from the parent that is losing parental rights.
If you are receiving benefits from Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI), child support can be taken from your SSDI payments. However, if you are receving Supplemental Security Income, that cannot be seized for child support.
SSDI paid on the child's behalf, based on the obligor's account, is considered child support. The obligor would owe the difference, if any, between the amount of support ordered and the amount of SSDI, but the obligor should immediately take steps to obtain a modification to set the amount down to the amount being issued. see links
Maybe. It depends upon the nature of the symptoms and whether they prevent the SSDI applicant from performing any work.
Yes, but the benefit check will increase.
From SSDI, yes. From SSI, no. Wisconsin Law states that a non-custodial parent's Child Support Obligation will be reduced by the amount of Auxiliary Payments(money paid by SSA based on disabled parent's SSDI) that the child (or Representative Payee)receives. If anyone can provide the exact statute that states this fact, please include the statute number and title in this answer, please.
None out of SSI. If on SSDI, child support should be modified to equal the amount of the child benefit check. see link.
possibly, for arrearages
They can garnish those payments.
Are you asking about SSDI? The answer is most likely not. It is very hard to qualify for SSDI to begin with and where you will be going back to work in a short period of time after your recovery it is very unlikely.