A cross-party consensus on reducing the number of  benefits awards for anxiety and depression appears to be building. Shadow chancellor Mel Stride became the latest politician to speak out about the number of awards for “less severe mental health problems”, in his speech to the Conservative party conference today.

Below we have set out where the Conservatives, Labour and Reform stand on the issue. 

The LibDems have not made their position clear, although in a recent interview Ed Davey did claim there was “quite a lot of fraud” amongst recent PIP claims.

Conservatives

Stride told the conference:

“So we will ensure that benefits are properly targeted at those most in need, with people thriving in jobs where they can and should be working.

“That includes stopping claims for people with less severe mental health problems where what is needed is treatment and support, not simply cash.

“Because we know that the stability, pride and social interaction of work actually improves these conditions.”

Back in 2024, Stride told the Telegraph:

“There is a real risk now that we are labelling the normal ups and downs of human life as medical conditions which then actually serve to hold people back and, ultimately, drive up the benefit bill.

“If they go to the doctor and say ‘I’m feeling rather down and bluesy’, the doctor will give them on average about seven minutes and then, on 94% of occasions, they will be signed off as not fit to carry out any work whatsoever.”

Conservatives Update

Shadow work and pensions minister Helen Whately has now also spoken at the conference:

“But millions of people right now, are sitting on the sofa at home.

“Millions have got themselves a sick note from the GP and signed onto sickness benefits with just a form and a phone call.

“Millions are getting benefits for anxiety and ADHD, along with a free Motability car.

“TikTok videos tell you how - and some people even pay for VIP services to boost their chances of a successful benefits claim.

“Yes, there are people with serious illnesses and disabilities,

“But one in four people now describe themselves as disabled, so what does the term even mean . . . Fix the 'sick note' system, bring back face-to-face assessments, end sickness benefits for low level mental health problems, stop the abuse of Motability, and put British citizens first in our benefits system – just living here is not a reason to get money from taxpayers.”

Labour

Last week we highlighted that Labour is launching a review to decide whether some mental health and neurodivergence issues are being overdiagnosed.  The aim is clearly to provide a scientific justification for reducing the number of awards on these grounds.

Back in March, health minister Wes Streeting, the man behind this review, told the BBC that there was an “overdiagnosis” of mental health conditions and that “there’s too many people being written off”. 

And last week, prime minister Keir Starmer told Radio 4 that:

“I think we need to look again at this issue of mental health and ask ourselves a fundamental question, which is: would we not be better putting our money in the resources and support that is needed for mental health than simply saying, it’s to be provided in benefits?”

So, there seems little doubt that Labour have mental health conditions, especially as they relate to awards for young people, in their sights.

Reform

Meanwhile, Reform’s welfare spokesperson Lee Anderson assured us earlier this month:

“It’s become fashionable now to have mental health problems, to have your own counsellor, to go for therapy, to have anxiety attacks, to get down to the local benefit centre and sign on for PIP or ESA.”

And the latest defector from the Conservatives to Reform, former shadow DWP minister Danny Kruger has also highlighted the number of claims for less severe mental health conditions:

“ . . . the incidence of disability in our society is rising by 17% while benefit claims are rising by 34%. For some of the less severe mental health claims, it is far worse. In January 2020, there were 7,000 claims for people with anxiety disorders; this year, there are 31,000. In January 2020, there were 155,000 claims for anxiety and depressive disorders mixed; now there are 365,000.”

What next?

At the moment only Labour have the power to make changes to the benefits system.  Their recent attempt to reform PIP ended in failure after a backbench revolt supported by almost all the opposition parties.

However, if Labour does bring forward legislation to, make it harder to claim benefits on the basis of mental health conditions, then it looks likely that even a major backbench revolt would not necessarily prevent legislation being passed – provide Starmer was prepared to rely on Conservative and Reform support to get a bill through parliament.

But another major revolt, even if unsuccessful, might be fatal for Starmer’s leadership and so something he may not wish to risk.

Rather than waiting for Labour’s report on overdiagnosis and its inevitable conclusion, mental health and neurodivergence charities need to begin the work of putting the facts before MPs and the public now, before it’s too late.

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  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 8 days ago
    ‘Down and bluesy’ - spoken like a person who has clearly NEVER suffered from mental health problems. Maybe if they addressed WHY so many people are feeling the need to claim benefits due to MHP, and actually served us, the people, by getting to the root of the problem instead of beating us with a stick? 
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    · 14 days ago
    I would be baffled as to how a over diagnosis finding could be made, given that most people for health problems, mental or physical cannot even get referred now days, never mind diagnosed, autism has a 5 year waiting list.  GP's playing everything down such as referring autism for ADHD only or claiming its a bit of social anxiety.  I agree with b&w that the outcome is already decided, they just figuring out how to get to it.  The danger of claiming there is a problem of over diagnosing is that it will become even harder to get treatment for conditions as I expect it to have ramifications on the entire health system.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 15 days ago
    They make my lifelong MH problems zoom out of control. 
    I am in no way shape or form trying to denigrate those with newly diagnosed MH conditions absolutely not, but for those of us who has lived experience most of ,if not all of our lives what of us? Are we also faking? Are we less severe? And by the way what's less severe??. Without going into my life on The mental health side, and my numerous physical conditions I want to say this,as I can only speak on my own experience, TRY MY LIFE.
    I am on a perpetual cycle of fear,anxiety,panic,intrusive thoughts from past traumas, and I can't go anywhere,do anything. I am disgusted at how it's classed as being "fashionable" to suffer hell from mental health distress.
    So therapists, psychiatrists, and phycologist are all "In on it with us" ? Well, then there no need for any of them at that rate. They should all be out of a job. See how bloody ludicrous the entire thing sounds. Somebody needs to speak up for us before it's too late, I can't take very much more. And I know i'm far from alone in that. 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 19 days ago
    These politicians know that a lot of people who claim support have been working for years and are burning out under the strain of coping with the demands of hostile work places. 

    I was gladly getting out of bed to work 12 hour shifts doing something I am qualified and good at. I dreaded the thought of having to face the DWP I felt good not having any interaction with them.

    Unfortunately I got sacked multiple times due to my hypervigilance stemming from a horrific incident at work. Which l later found out was exacerbated by neurodivergance.

    As a qualified clinician with a post grad I even went back to minimum wage to get DWP off my case. 

    I love the routine of work but simply cannot cope I've even been back to the doctor to get signed fit after being told to stay off sick by my employers. 

    I won multiple settlements through tribunal processes and if I was savvy I could keep getting jobs and finding genuine gaps in service provision,  going through the steps towards another P45 and settlement. 

    I just want to be left alone in peace now. I would seriously make plans to end my life , if I had to go through all that again. 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 18 days ago
      @Jayjay This is the problem and why this needs slapping down, there's a scarily large amount of people considering ending their life I've seen across social media and forums and that's BEFORE anything has been brought forward let alone become law.

      This must be stopped before it even is attempted, although I STILL don't think they'll get away with it it's not impossible.

      someone with some influence or connections needs to get the comments on here alone out there in front of mps, scared people who literally CAN'T survive without that pittance and CAN'T work should never ever be treated worse than a convicted criminal simply for being born with or acquiring disabilities.

      Nobody should ever be scared witless about their future and cope with their very NOT Mild conditions on top.

      it's like throwing somebody with no arms into the Pacific ocean and yelling enjoy your swim, absolutely sick.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 19 days ago
    It shows an ignorance of mental health issues and experiences. The charities need to be explaining and advocating very clearly that anxiety and depression are not minor things but can be life threatening. The model for how to view them has changed in the last few years among professionals such as psychiatrists and not always for the better. They are abandoning the idea that depression is an imbalance of brain chemicals in favour of behavioural models which push the causes back onto the patient. I’m not debating either point of view but this tendency to remove the causes from the physicality of the body to behavioural models is a godsend to those who want to ‘blame and shame’ sufferers. People like our current politicians. It is sad and frightening. But we need to keep trying to get over that whatever the cause may be the reality of the experience is the main thing. The weariness and exhaustion of body and mind, the bravery it can take just to get up that day, the physical aching and pain from tense muscles, the sickness and stomach issues of anxiety, the inability to think straight and the panic and fear that is like a physical pain. It isn’t sitting around and sighing a bit and ‘feeling blue’. It’s a real illness. 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 19 days ago
    Where are all the employers willing to take on people who are impaired? They are looking for resilience, reliability and consistency. None of which are possible when suffering poor mental health.
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    · 19 days ago
    I do agree that there seems to be a massive increase in  the diagnosis of autism and ADHD. It's been talked about so much in the media and  online  that people who have been misdiagnosed or not diagnosed for years are now asking  to be assessed. I'm sure some may be playing the system but the majority , especially women are finally getting the help they need. Whether they qualify for benefits  though depends on the severity. My son was diagnosed with ADHD aged 5. He is also on the autistic spectrum. I claimed DLA for him as a child because he needed so much extra help but he chose to stop claiming when an adult. Now, aged 37 he's been rediagnosed and treated. The difference the treatment has made  in his ability to complete work and hold down a high powered job is massive. He has no need to claim any benefits. His wife is also autistic but she also works although without the success she could be capable of. ADHD especially has historically been seen as a    problem mainly in boys. Symptoms in women have been ignored for years so there's bound to be a big increase but not all should be claiming benefits. This is not a decision  to be made by politicians but by medical professionals.
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      · 14 days ago
      @Diana I have lived with autism for 40 years, bear in mind the capability to diagnose it and so forth has only developed over time which would explain the nature of the growth of diagnosis, however if anything it is under diagnosed as its extremely hard to get referred, and if you do its now a 5 year wait.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 18 days ago
      @Diana I was diagnosed with High-Functioning Autistic Spectrum Condition in 2022, at the age of 59 - having commenced studying for a BA in Applied Theology.

      My diagnostic report from the Registered Clinical Psychologist stated that I had struggled with this condition since childhood, but for both educational and parental reasons, I had not been diagnosed. My career has been a “train-wreck” of six different careers through the 1980’s - 2009, including Service in HM Forces, a B.Sc. (Honours) in Computing and Master’s-level study in Project Management. Then, during PGCE Teacher Training, I was physically attacked at a Secondary school known for its violent students.

      I have battled several bouts of severe, acute depression (including suicidal attempts), on top of PTSD and a misdiagnosis of BPD (subsequently disproven), and have suffered two severe Industrial Injuries and a permanent, severe “prescribed industrial disease”, I was signed-off as permanently unfit for work by my GP in July 2009.

      How this Government expects me - or anyone with my record - to become employable and hold down a job, is not only farcical, but stinks of “Alice in Wonderland” expectations.

      Who will carry out WCA reviews on us? Will they be the same as in the past - non-specialist healthcare “professionals”, with fixed quotas? And will they be required to accept the diagnoses from qualified and experienced medical doctors and Registered Clinical Psychologists, or simply disregard these, as they currently can?

      Maybe, if MPs had actual, real-life experience of our conditions, they might show some modicum of compassion! (Yeah, right - porcines might engage in aeronautics!)
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 19 days ago
      @John Interesting note . Leo Kanner who was also Austrian but moved to the U.S identified Autism. He appeared to be a decent human being by all accounts and saw the value in every child's life. He never once spoke to that N×#i doctor despite several requests. Asperger would have sent the children that Kanner tried to help to their deaths because they were non verbal. Sorry if this is appears off topic but it's at the very core of the discussion on the value of the human condition. 
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      · 19 days ago
      @Diana One of the reasons Autism figures increased is Asperger Syndrome was abolished as a separate diagnosis category and instead is now part of Autism spectrum diagnosis and Autism figures. Due to doctor Asperger who came up with the seperate diagnosis and who the condition was named after being a Nazi.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 19 days ago
    What are charities going to do?  The government don't care about the facts, they just do what they want!

    Case in point - the recent digital ID news.  Over 2.8 million signatures, and the government replied "we will go ahead".  They don't care, they are not held accountable, they've been doing what they want for decades now and it has to stop! 

    Benefit cuts are on the agenda, even though it was NOT in Labour's manifesto.  They kept quiet, then attacked us once in power.  It's disgusting. 

    So I have absolutely no faith that anything they do to us will be based on evidence, they'll simply ignore the facts and do as they please.  The real question is what will we as a society do when disabled people start dying?  

    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 19 days ago
      @bronc Partially defeated. The cut to UC LCWRA for new claimants still passed. And will cause more poverty. And PIP cuts were just postponed, as they are going to try again when the Timms review reports in Autumn 2026. And what happens in 2028 if/when the Work Capability Assessment and UC LCW, LCWRA status are abolished, and contributions based ESA/New Style ESA abolished.

      And the media and public narrative on disability benefits has not been changed. It is still seen as what the public wants, and a vote winner. With Labour, Conservative, LibDem, Reform all claiming vast numbers of those on disability benefits don't deserve them and calling for cuts in disability spending.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 19 days ago
      @bronc Sadly bronc, it wasn't a total victory, the government still managed to pass the halving of the UC health element amount for all new claims. Even though we fought hard they are still making small victories against us each time they push forward with these reforms. I fear the Timms review and PIP reform will be another devastating blow for us. They just keep attacking us, if we seem to defeat their plans they just come back harder months later. It's a never-ending cycle of cat and mouse.  
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      · 19 days ago
      @Alex We defeated the government in the summer and can do it again. Defeatism won't get us anywhere. As a historian of many decades it is very clear that all of the rights we have have had to be fought for. They have not been given to us by benevolent politicians.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 19 days ago
    MPs that create stigma against people who suffer from mental health do not help people with mental health problems. 'Mild' depression can involve active suicidal ideation, and indeed suicide, and it can certainly be made worse by being forced into full-time employment when one is not able to cope. GPs don't just sign people off work for being a little bluesy, and victimising and overtly discriminating against these people is beyond the pale. 
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      · 19 days ago
      @Heisenberg When politicians talk about mild depression and anxiety. They are not actually talking about mild depression or anxiety as that level according to the NHS does not impact the ability to function in daily life. So they would not be incapable of working UC LCW or LCWRA and would not be incapable of looking after themself PIP.

      They are talking about those so unwell they are unable to work UC LCW or LCWRA and those so unwell they are unable to look after themselves PIP. Who could end up in poverty and or neglect and possibly a early grave if they have their benefits reduced or removed.

      And they are actually talking about all mental health disorders not just depression and anxiety.

      The group they appear to not consider mild is those with "severe" mental illnesses. "Severe" mental illnesses being those with psychosis. Where the person loses touch with reality and is delusional or having hallucinations. This group appears to be viewed as not mild due to cost of hospitalisation and fear/prejudice about the nature of their illness.

      But, going by what Liz Kendall said when she was DWP Minister this group may also not be safe under Labour. 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 20 days ago
    Severe mental ill health means a person cannot live/function or enjoy life never mind work.  

    For those on here with mental ill health issues, it is better to ignore these reports from the relative Governments.  I am so relieved I will be a few months from a state pension when the next election happened.  For those not in that position, always use the Citizens Advice Bureaux when filling in any forms to apply for Universal Credit or PIP.  They are not prejudiced, they know the dangers of mental ill health and they know how to fill the forms in to give you the best way of getting an award.  Lots of people with mental ill health will not know how to convey how severely their depression/anxiety affects them in a way that the DWP will take notice of. The CAB does.

    Being as how ill I feel right now with mental ill health, I would love to have any of the members of parliament here to tell them.  THey might not dismiss these issues so easily. (Mental ill health/depression and even anxiety can lead to suicide which is not spoken about often enough in all these debates.)
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 20 days ago
    We can see how we've come to this sinister position. As the economy buckled during & after Covid, populist media & politicians increased victimising & scapegoating those suffering various health conditions, not least mental (& ditto many migrants). Suddenly, we were the bigger problem that needs fixing, rather than the many billions squandered on dodgy deals during Covid, getting neck deep in financially supporting foreign wars & avoiding small tax increases on the wealthiest individuals & corporations. Many of whom make huge political donations. Alas, this chimes with many voters, who unthinkingly swallow the media's stereotyping & false representations. Opportunistic politicians of all main parties are now pushing this with greater vigour from their own political interests. Leaving the ECHR will make it easier for them to get more callous policies through. It really is a sad reflection of the poor state of British politics across the spectrum (smaller parties like Greens excluded). Things are unlikely to get better for a few years. But we mustn't lose hope & give in, as that plays into their hands. When economies recover, the political climate is likely to change yet again for the better. 
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      · 18 days ago
      @Ivan And with the horrific prospect of the Assisted Dying Bill becoming Law, the pressure on chronically, severely ill people will only increase - especially with mainstream media, social media and wilfully ignorant, politically-biased politicians and their Parties all jumping on the Benefit cuts bandwagon!
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      · 19 days ago
      @Ivan Please please put this excellent and articulate response in a letter to your MP.
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      · 20 days ago
      @Boo Much agreed. We should use every useful recourse to push back against the lies. As it stands, if any individual posts a balanced comment on some populist site, they soon get shouted down & accused of all sorts. - A notorious propagandist from 1930s Germany once stated that if you repeat lies often enough, they become accepted as true. Sadly, this is playing out today across much of today's media & our main political parties. We're easy targets to avoid addressing the real, far bigger issues behind why most economies are still struggling. 
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      · 20 days ago
      @Ivan Perhaps benefits and works could have an editorial panel that debunks these lies and sends them to the newspapers and news sites to challenge. It’s because no one is challenging these lies they are emboldened to go further and faster with their propaganda.
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    · 20 days ago
    Snide is the epitome of a greasy-pole climbing ‘yes-man’ who will say and do anything
    in a pathetic attempt to curry favour and remain ‘relevant’. He is beneath contempt and his ‘speech’ today at conference (to a two-thirds empty room) consisted of him insisting the tories are the party of fiscal responsibility along with eye-watering benefits cuts and a promise that he wants to help you to “a better life”. The tories are a sinking ship that’s going under soon. And labour are going under too imo. Everyone can see what’s coming next and it won’t be pretty. The traditional two-party system is in its death-throes and I fear for the future of ordinary life as we know it over the course of the next few years unless something miraculous happens and I’ve no idea what that thing is. The tech bros are riding the crest of a wave, with the MAGA mindset becoming more and more prevalent over here with our own pound-shop version of the orange psychopath. And dare you imagine the sheer amount  of ‘alternative facts’ that will be bombarding our semi-literate younger generation in, say, the 2030s? On the other hand, maybe everything will turn out just fine and we can all learn to respect one another’s opinions and live peacefully together for the common good. Fingers crossed 

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      · 16 days ago
      @John You're a real barrel of laughs😂. You've right put me off my supper, though what you say is probably true.
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      · 20 days ago
      @David The next general election is years away at a date of Labour's choosing. I expect by then Labour and the Conservatives will both have new leaders. The USA may have demonstrated that electing a Trump tribute act would be a bad idea. Maybe the Ukraine war will have ended and Ukraine food, fertilizer and animal feed exports, and Russian oil and gas exports will reduce prices, reducing the cost of living crisis. The right wing vote maybe split further, Elon Musk and Tommy Robinson back Advance UK a new Christian Nationalist party. With our first past the post electoral system people may turn up and vote tactically to keep the likes of Reform and Advance UK out of power. Despite the current increasingly bad polling. Personally I expect Labour to win again. Possibly a Labour LibDem government.

      I see the worst case scenario as Trump wrecks the world economy causing a global recession and UK voters as usual blame whoever is in government in the UK for the state of the UK economy. Reform and worse get into power and the UK's decent into hell accelerates.  
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    · 20 days ago
    Been following the Tory updates all day on welfare 
    I am shocked and appalled by their lies, demonisation and lack of humanity for disabled people including mental health. Severity shouldn’t matter. It’s pushing an us vs them narrative and who is more worthy, counting those “less severe” as not worth helping. The false claims of overdiagnosis will do so much harm for future and existing claimants
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      · 16 days ago
      @Catherine That narrative is already in play, just look at the mental health two tier system, primary care for mild / moderate conditions equates to no help shake yourself and get on with it compared to recovery team where the I'm hearing voices brigade seriously no disrespect intended it's a serious illness, get 100% attention and CPN and psychiatrist appointments.I suffer with bad anxiety and moderate depression both affect me enough to affect my quality of life but back in 2013 I was unceremoniously dumped from recovery to primary care.I have friends who are sczhiophrenic and who are well controlled on their current meds,same individuals are mostly  from what I've observed able to travel unaccompanied on buses, walk around town centres, yet myself with my so called panic attacks and agoraphobia unable to go out alone or on a bus journey am relegated to the bottom of the ladder where there is no ongoing help or care,any problems ring GP get referred again to primary care team back on the merry go round again and again it's so unfair, if this comes to pass it's the  final nail in the coffin for me 😭.
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    · 20 days ago
    It's always  the same pick on the sick disabled rhetoric wheeled out when the talk of saving tax payers  money, whilst they IMO are wasting  many times the cost of paying the sick disabled on other things such as net zero, and  wars, and of  cause the lasted waste of £££ digital ID
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 20 days ago
    I'm scared. 
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      · 20 days ago
      @Clay I know, man. I'm scared too.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 20 days ago
    It depends on the severity of the symptoms of anxiety and how many years and life events people have had some people have worked for many years with it until they couldn’t because they couldn’t think or function and no employer can rely on them. Any number of pull yourself together will not work just drive the person towards harming themselves . They can keep their money if it comes down to it because I can’t take any more of their sanctimonious attitude. I hope they all get it and see what it’s like. I bet you most people with anxiety and depression have more conditions than just that. With the way the whole lot of them have run and are running the country there’s not much to laugh at unless you are rich. What an absolute bunch of hypocrites.
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    · 20 days ago
    I wonder how they will then deal with the inevitable rise in suicide. 

    We're all so utterly scared done for. Not even a suggestion of fixing the reasons why young people are suffering, just punish them more
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      · 17 days ago
      @A I bet they and the media just wont acknowledge it, it'll just be brushed under the carpet like the many deaths that have already happened due to the DWP.
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    · 20 days ago
    What will happen to those claimants who have anxiety, or depression, or both, but who also have other health conditions as well, such as heart disease, or kidney failure, or visual impairment? Will they also be denied vital benefits on the spurious grounds that they also have a "milder" mental health condition, their physical impairment or health condition notwithstanding?

    And what will happen to those claimants who are not eligible for treatment on the NHS via NHS Talking Therapies? NHS Talking Therapies do not accept referrals from any patient with a history of suicidal ideation, suicide attempts or self-harm - which I imagine would include a huge number of claimants with anxiety & depression.
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      · 16 days ago
      @Idonia You are factually incorrect. I am a clinician within an NHS Talking Therapies service. NHS Talking Therapies DO NOT (and should not) reject patients with previous suicidal ideation, attempts, or self harm. The service I work in definitely doesn't. I would be grateful if you could address (and ideally retract) the misinformation in your comment.
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    · 21 days ago
    I always knew I was never going to make it to retirement age. I'm 54, I can't do this anymore. They are piling on those who don't have the resilience to cope with these constant attacks and threats. It's making me so ill, so much worse than I was.
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    · 21 days ago
    Although It's very reassuring to see they've sensibly excluded autism, learning  issues and psychosis from this warped drivel it's still dangerous and discriminatory.

    Anxiety and depression also work on a scale, yes there may be a few cases where the claimants depression or anxiety is a one off due to a bad life event and they'll recover, it needs to be recognised also that some depression lasts years or even for life,does not respond to any medication or therapy and that anxiety can also be at a severe end where it takes over and consumes a life, leads to physical symptoms such as vomiting,muscle spasms and much more.

    Thankfully the conservatives won't see power anytime soon, Labour has less of a backbone (thankfully) as well as a handful of genuinely good souls, reform (for now) is irrelevant so again not much will come of this it's too controversial.

    but  these dangerous and clueless politicians need to realise this entire cohort are at high risk of suicide and in my experience cornering them is fatal and foolish because these vulnerable people don't bluff about such a thing.
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      · 19 days ago
      @Dpb91
      I agree, My son and wife are both autistic and son has ADHD. Both work. They claim no benefits although I feel both would have grounds to claim.  The need for extra help doesn't just come down to a label.

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      · 19 days ago
      @lemon pie 🍋 What about dyslexia and dementia ? I know someone who has both of these and their partner cares for them and they have been getting harrassed by job centre. Its not like they are young either - early 60s
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      · 20 days ago
      @lemon pie 🍋 Correct, Bluster and hot air, nothing can come of such a sick and pathetic plan.


      I have Two family members in the law profession and they strongly think all this is to get claimants so scared they themselves voluntarily close their claim. Which means by the time they realise nothing will happen they've already been taken off the system, have to reapply and what do you know they are now a new claimant with reduced amount and more conditionality. THAT is the REAL plan!

      any legislation of such a nature would be kicked to the curb by the high court if it made it.
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      · 20 days ago
      @Dpb91 Please don't take this the wrong way, Pip is awarded on how much it affects the person not the illness, pointing out different illness cohorts won't help, We are so much stronger standing together. As they tick off one cohort against another and they will, it's better to stand strong together because they are working down a list . The way they treat disabled people says alot about them not us, Everybody works and pays in. But life happens and disability is a club nobody really wants to join ,but things happen, These people are already beating the most vulnerable when there already down. We shouldn't do it to ourselves also. There all about devide and concore, it's a game to them. But unfortunately it's our life.
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      · 20 days ago
      @lemon pie 🍋 Will probably be Reform/Tory coalition   if its not a majority for Reform so we are all stuffed either way.