Work Capability Assessment is found lacking

Mar 14, 2011
Work Capability Assessment is found lacking

Tuesday, 8 March 2011


The eligibility test for the new employment support allowance is widely condemned to MPs at a pilot scheme meeting.


'I felt it was assumed that I was lying. It was more like a police officer cross-questioning a suspected offender than someone looking at my health and welfare and mental condition.'


MPs on the work and pensions select committee were in Burnley on Monday listening to the views of benefit claimants who have been part of a pilot for a new test designed to filter those people able to work from those who are too sick or disabled to do so.


If they expected positive accounts they will have been disappointed. Speaker after speaker at the public meeting at Burnley football club gave negative accounts of their experience of being tested for eligibility for the new employment support allowance, the replacement for incapacity benefit, which is to be introduced nationwide from the start of next month.


About 50 people attended the highly charged, emotional meeting. Most did not introduce themselves by name but simply with a brief description of the nature of their medical condition, and their accounts provided MPs with a detailed picture of what it feels like to undergo the work capability assessment (WCA) – the new computer-led test.


The test has been vigorously criticised by charities such as Citizens Advice and by a government-commissioned independent review, saying that the process is impersonal, and ill-equipped to gauge the seriousness of mental health conditions, or the nuances of complex medical problems.


One by one, individuals outlined the difficulties they had experienced. 'I just seemed to be a number. The health professional didn't know what one of my conditions was,' one man said.


'It was a complete farce,' a second man said. 'They asked: How did you get here? How are you going to get home? Do you shop? Do you bathe yourself? But not how does it hurt? Where did it hurt? None of that. 'I've got arthritis in my legs, my knees, my shoulders.'


'My wife scored zero points,' another said. 'The test was a total waste of time; it was all physically orientated, nothing about her mental state. They asked things like 'Can you brush your teeth?' How that relates to mental health issues is beyond me. It was overthrown at tribunal. I can only describe it as mental torture; she was a mental wreck after it.'


Paul Hogarth, from the local Citizens Advice Bureau, said the system had been widely portrayed as a process of 'rooting out the shirkers', but argued that the test was not fit for purpose, frequently declaring people with serious health conditions fit for work. The advice centre had supported many people to tribunals, 80% of whom had seen the assessor's decision overturned, he said.


Among those who successfully appealed was Ean Williams, 45, who told MPs that he had originally been given zero points in his assessment, despite having multiple sclerosis, and providing a letter from a surgeon stating he was too ill to work.


To qualify for the benefit, claimants need to be awarded 15 points.


'I'm sure that some people do scam the system, but why were they targeting me? I have hard medical evidence saying I had MS,' he said.


Kevin Nuttall, a welfare rights adviser working with Action for Blind People in Lancashire, said he had supported someone through a test which concluded that he had 'mild visual impairment' and was fit for work. 'He was in fact registered blind,' he said.


Over the next three years 1.5 million people currently claiming incapacity benefit will undergo the work capability assessment, carried out by a medical and IT company, Atos. The new test is tougher than the old version, and the government expects to save £1bn over five years by encouraging people into work, or failing that on to a lower-paid benefit.


Oliver Heald, the Conservative MP for North East Hertfordshire, asked whether it was not a good thing that people with mental health problems were being helped into work. 'Isn't it about changing attitudes? Trying to find out what are the capabilities of that person - and shouldn't that person be able to use their talents?' he asked.


There was loud disagreement from the hall. 'But the work capability assessment isn't like that. It's hostile,' one man said. One woman described the frustration of trying to get in contact with the Atos headquarters to query her assessment result, stating she had dialled the number 'about 125' times. 'There's a recorded voice saying, Sorry, all our advisers are busy. And the line goes dead.'


Others said the large number of appeals meant a long wait for cases to be heard, and in the meantime they were allocated the lower rate of benefit, £65 a week, rather than £91. 'I am waiting for a tribunal, but I'm told that it won't be before June, because there are so many people waiting. I'm stuck on the £65 benefit until then,' a woman with ME said, and began to cry.


The chair, Dame Anne Begg (Labour, Aberdeen South), said this was the first time in her nine years on the committee that MPs had ventured out and talked to real people. 'We should do this kind of thing more,' she said.


Afterwards she said she was concerned about the speed with which the reform was being pushed through: 'Personally, I see there are serious problem with the WCA. My view is that either they should be slowing down the national rollout or speeding up the implementations of changes to the system.'

Read 'A Tale of Our Times'.   One woman's experience of 'the system.'

 

Midsteeple, High Street
Dumfries DG1 2BH
t: 01387 257770
e: info@dgvoice.co.uk

Current News

 

Access to Work Figures Plunge Again

New figures show the number of disabled people granted funds to make their workplaces more accessible has fallen sharply again.

Read more... »

Disability Discrimination not the Wright Stuff!

Matthew Wright's Channel 5 daytime show is being investigated by Ofcom over a survey that used the words 'mong', 'spaz' and 'retard'.

Read more... »

Drugs Prescribing in Care Homes

ELDERLY patients in care homes across Scotland are being prescribed powerful drugs for long periods of time without proper checks on whether the medication is needed.

Read more... »

ENIL Press Release

Last week, on 15 September 2011, around 200 Independent Living activists from 20 European countries met with the Disability Intergroup

Read more... »

European Network on Independent Living

European Independent Living Movement Meets with the Disability

Intergroup at the European Parliament


Read more... »

Access to Work

Access to Work

UKDPC boss’s anger after government denies vital support

Read more... »

Dumfries Mum Raises Cash for Specialist School Equipment

A MUM whose son has a rare disability has raised £1,200 for specialist school equipment.

Read more... »

Youth Matters Conference A Success

Youth Matters Conference A Success

A YOUTH summit geared towards disabled people in Dumfries and Galloway has been hailed a success.

Read more... »

 

News Archive

 

News Update From Inclusion Scotland

Monday 19th September 2011

Disabled people routinely experience discrimination in modern Scotland,

Read more... »

Deteriorating Attitudes Towards Disabled People

Deteriorating Attitudes Towards Disabled People

New poll commissioned by Scope shows the alarming levels of discrimination disabled people face in daily life.

Read more... »

ATOS Register of Shame

ATOS Register of Shame

A new disability organisatiion's online 'register of shame' has been published on the internet by an independent organisation

Read more... »

New Joint Health & Wellbeing Unit

On Monday 4th May NHS Health Board endorsed proposals to set up the new Joint Health and Wellbeing Unit.

Read more... »

Health Board Member had to Resign

Health Board Member had to Resign

Former board member Alis Ballance had no choice but to quit her post because she was standing as a candidate in the election.

Read more... »

Evidence Suggests Fraud

Benefits system is in danger of creating its own miscarriages of justice, says Edward Lawrence.

Read more... »

First blind MSP elected to Holyrood

First blind MSP elected to Holyrood

The next session of Holyrood will see the first ever blind MSP take his seat in the Scottish parliament.

 

Read more... »

Work Capability Assessment is found lacking

Work Capability Assessment is found lacking

Read more... »

Blue Badge Victory - The Future

Blue Badge Victory - The Future

After the success of their campaign against the Blue Badge Charge, DGVoice has

Read more... »

Solway Disabled Ramblers

Solway Disabled Ramblers

Solway Disabled Ramblers in fundraising effort

Read more... »

Disability Living Allowance

Disability Living Allowance

Coalition Announces Changes

Read more... »