Effective date (in any sense) means the earliest date something starts at. For example "Beginning January 1, 2010 xxxxx will be the new law", where "January 1, 2010" is the effective date that the new law becomes official.
This is the "application for benefits" date and is always a Sunday according to the PA Unemployment web site.
The effective date normally means the initial or policy effective date in a reinstatement date of policy document. It can not mean reinstatement date solely. Technically it is not starting effective.
The Policy effective date is the date that your insurance coverage started under that policy.
date and living city
It usually refers to place and date of birth, but it depends on what proceeds it...
if you mean unemployment benefit, yes it does
to lose your job.
"Fecha de vigencia" means date of validity or expiration date in English. It refers to the specific date when something, such as a document or a license, becomes effective or expires.
Expiration dates mean the date that the drug is full-strength. After that date, it's no longer as effective. You can take it, but it probably won't work well.
I suppose you mean unemployment compensation. That is administered by the state you live in. The answer is never.
There is no cyclical unemployment.
It depends on what you mean by "diagnose medical issues". If you mean medical diagnosis per se, not unless they are a doctor. If you mean whether questions that relate to medical application vs technical unemployment requirements that has nothing to do with treatment, cause of medical problem (unless, of course it may relate to working conditions), etc. then yes they need to deal with those issues.