The cross-party House of Lords Economic Affairs Committee (EAC) has today called for the government to “accelerate its plans to reform health-related benefits”, warning that the country now spends more on incapacity and disability benefits than on defence  

The 14 member EAC has four each of Labour, Conservative and crossbench peers and two Lib Dems and includes former Tory Chancellor Norman Lamont.

The EAC claims that 3.7 million people of working age receive health-related benefits, 1.2 million more than in February 2020. They argue that the UK is now spending more on incapacity and disability benefits (almost £65 billion) than defence – and that figure is set to rise.

The committee also says it has seen no convincing evidence that deteriorating health or high NHS waiting lists have been the main driver of the rise in health-related benefit claims

It argues that there has been “a wealth of analysis” of the problems with the benefits system along with credible solutions.

The EAC’s recommendations include

  • A reform of the fit note system
  • Individuals who are signed off work for more than a month should undergo additional or ongoing assessments
  • Work Capability Assessment (WCA) is not rigorous enough and susceptible to error. The assessment should be face-to-face and seek to establish what work an individual can do rather than looking to corroborate what they cannot do.
  • If people return to work, they should not be at risk of immediately losing benefits; or, if the job proves unsuitable, they should not be immediately faced with having to reapply for these benefits.
  • Just as unemployed people have a work coach, so should those on incapacity benefit for the first two years of their period on benefits.

The call will add to growing pressure on Liz Kendall to make cuts to benefits, at the same time as last week’s High Court Judgement will oblige her to be honest about the financial effects of those cuts on claimants.

You can read the committee’s call for urgent action here.

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  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 1 months ago
    Am super worried as some one who has epilepsy and autism and cerebral palsy and dyslexia and ocd 
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      · 28 days ago
      @Tom
      Tom, While I do sympathise with you're very real concern, do not dwell on this too much.  What hasn't happened is not real.  Do not waste your precious energies on any of this unless it happens, and then hopefully, you will have all the support that you need from these wonderful people here, my friend.  Your only reality is now.
      Very Best Wishes.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 1 months ago
    "Individuals who are signed off work for more than a month should undergo additional or ongoing assessments" Great way of wasting even more money, do these parasites have a financial interest  in the companies doin these assessments?
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 28 days ago
      @tom Of course they do, Tom.  It is shameful.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 1 months ago
    I have read the Lord's letter to Liz Kendall and I was stunned that 2.7 million people, around 6% working-age population, are claiming out of work disability benefits without a clinical diagnosis.

    Therefore, the tories called for focusing more in conditions itself not only the effects of it when deciding PIP and after the tories, the labour is talking about an end of self-diagnosis when it comes to disability benefits.

    I do not know if you agree with me or not when I say it is fair that a medical diagnosis must be required for the entitlement of disability benefits so people most in need get the help and support they are entitled to.



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      · 29 days ago
      @Steve It takes an average of ten years to get a diagnosis of, for example, ME/CFS or fibromyalgia. People have died of starvation due to ME without a diagnosis because it's so hard to isolate as a cause of their disability. If you can't get access to mental health care, how do you get a diagnosis of, for example, major depression or autism? Women find getting the medical profession to take their complaints seriously, being fobbed off for years when they are suffering from horrific endometriosis for example. Or end up having to go private at 52 to get a diagnosis of AuDHD that they should have received 40 years earlier, like me.

      The DWP say they judge on disability, not diagnosis. If you want it the other way round, all the people who are, for example, diagnosed with multiple sclerosis but have a benign form and are not disabled by it (like me for fifteen years) would be eligible for benefits they don't need.

      And conversely, those who suffer with illness and disability which isn't deem a 'qualifying condition' for benefits wouldn't get any help even if their condition actually made them bedridden or unable to wash themselves for example.

      Be careful what you wish for.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 1 months ago
      @MJ But not everyone gets a diagnosis but are still suffering is that fair,I dont think so.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 1 months ago
      @Steve I dont agree as some diagnosis can take years how can that fair if are suffering,I was only diagnosis with adhd at 54 after years after being misdiagnosed,it took my daughter 4 years for her autism diagnosis.What about if you have something rare or not recognised and are suffering. I always thought it wasnt about the diagnosis for that reason.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 1 months ago
      @Steve I agree, it is so hard to live on UC without the PIP despite having a specialist diagnosis from the NHS.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 1 months ago
      @Steve I totally agree with you. When you consider how many people with proper diagnoses are denied access to PIP those who don’t must be denied it too.
      Staggering 
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    · 1 months ago
    Isn't it time the Lords or any Government minister or MP accept there are people who are disabled and really couldn't work. Being brain injured from 23 months and now in my mid 40s hasn't been a  laugh. It is very much a hidden condition but no one seems to care except my family. I have a carer arranged by the local authority which I pay for from my PIP. My carer doesn't come in for fun. If I get sent for medicals few people understand brain in jury.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 1 months ago
    There is a funny whiff about all of this. I have claimed health benefits for a very long time and had to go to tribunal 3 times just to get ESA, not even PIP. The default position has since 2010 been to deny benefits. Hence the tribunals. Now suddenly we are seeing a massive increase in claims being allowed. PIP as well. How come the increase ? Political cover to make across the board cuts to levels ? if not claim numbers ? One can't help but wonder.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 1 months ago
      @Jim Yes, and no mitigations in terms of ventilation, air filtration and masking, access to  vaccines severely restricted. Almost all governments are doing this. It's head in the sand stuff.

      There's also the large increase in the state pension age. I think there's 3.6m women who would have been retired if that had not happened. So those of us already on esa continue on it for 6/7 more years rather than getting a pension and it's also an age when considerable numbers of people's health declines.

      Also NHS waiting lists and all the issues to do with poor working conditions and poverty.
      I think the population is genuinely sicker, but rather than improving these things we've to be punished. 

    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 1 months ago
      @Rik Long Covid, Covid injuries (it’s not well known that about 50% of early infections resulted in some undetected organ damage, showing on MRI. Etc), declining mental health due to lockdowns etc.. 
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      · 1 months ago
      @philip I've been thinking a lot about this. I'm on the fence as to whether this was deliberate or something that was caused by covid, and is more a happy accident so to speak, that they are using to justify swingeing cuts.
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    · 1 months ago
    Why don't all the lords and politician's give up their bonuses and benefits? Maybe stop banking abroad in offshore accounts too? I'm sure that'd plug any gaps in the country's economy soon enough. Oh yeah I forgot it's just easier to go after those who can't really defend themselves isn't it?
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 1 months ago
    People need to get emailing the disability charities this need to go high court and people need to get all their medical evidence what other evidence they got  and get to citizens advice  and find out how to stop the government before they even try  they taring everyone with same brush it's not right .
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 1 months ago
      @Lill As the government hasn't announced any plans yet then there isn't any case to take to court. Also, citizens advice have no power to stop the government.
      We all need to wait and see what the government announces. It's unlikely the government will be prevented from pushing ahead with reforms, they always get their plans through the HOL in the end.
       
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    · 1 months ago
    The only proof I have is  a letter from a consultant going back to 2013 stating my GAD, paranoia and OCD. 

    Just hope that still counts as a clinical diagnosis not the self diagnosis Labour keep banging on about; roll his eyes.

    I e also switched to the Greens from Labour; took a while to decide on that issue.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 1 months ago
      @Steve Yes I still take regular medications as they are the only things that help. 

      Thankyou
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 1 months ago
      @Matt Thank you.
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      · 1 months ago
      @Anon You may want to see your GP to be referred back to the Consultant. I had to get re-registerd as sight impaired when I was transferred from DLA to PIP. My original certificate of visual impairment was 'lost' by Devon County Council 
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      · 1 months ago
      @Anon Taking regular medications with this letter means you have ongoing health conditions.
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    · 1 months ago
    I honestly feel like they want to kill us off.  All of the evidence suggests that we are considered to be nothing more than a burden on the economy.  

    The freezing of LHA rates in a time of huge rent increases and a housing crisis.  My LHA barely covers half of my rent.

    The removal of the warm home allowance unless your house is deemed to be too cold.  

    The forced migration to UC that stops us getting any inflationary increases for the next few years as our transitional protection erodes.

    The freezing of the capital and savings allowance, so we can't budget for a crisis. 


    And now the attack continues, with:

    Reforms to sick notes?  We know what this means, a doctor who trained for years apparently isn't qualified enough to decide if we're fit to work.  Instead we'll probably get an incentive driven, unqualified work coach to decide what we can or can't do.

    Long term sick and disabled to get ongoing assessments?  They CLAIM to be trying to cut the bill, yet will need to employ more people to do these assessments, which will end up with lots of claims being cancelled, and tons of mandatory reconsiderations and appeals, which they will lose en masse and it'll end up costing them way more than they saved. 

    The only part I agree with is that we shouldn't be penalised for trying to return to work.  Some people may want to dip their toes in the water and see how they get on, and it might not work out for them.  So an easy path back to safety is a good thing.  But I don't trust the government, they try to put a positive spin on every nasty thing they do, so I don't have much faith in this idea either. 

    At the end of the day, they are yet again going after the most vulnerable in society, when we all know that INEQUALITY is the problem.  Tax the corporations and the rich, rather than attacking the poor every single year.  The benefits bill and the NHS bill could be covered if corporations paid their fair share, rather than getting tax break after tax break.


  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 1 months ago
    If these politicians in their ivory tower did the work they expected us to do they'd soon change their tune.
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    · 1 months ago
    I guess they are going to filter out those who do not have clinical diagnosis from claiming disability benefits and making harder for those who have to get the higher rate of it.
    However, I feel that the proposed changes to disability benefits will stop short of meeting these key recommendations as some of it are not achievable, in my point of view.
    Anyway, we have to wait till March to see the DWP response and their proposals of changes to the disability benefits.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 1 months ago
    It's rather ironic, Lords many of whom are in their 90s talking about benefits. The house of lords is a club where people sit around, do nothing and get what 300 pounds a day for doing so? Who are the real scroungers off of the taxpayers eh? It's funny how this flies over the heads of the Daily Mail readers who salivate at any attempt to demonize the incapacitated and disabled. 

    I'm tired of all of this, someone said disability benefit reform whilst pushing Euthanasia at the same time isn't by chance and you know what? I agree. I have to look after someone who is physically and mentally disabled, I keep tabs on what is going on and I've become so bitter at a section of the British public who have this vendetta against disabled people but I've never actually met anyone who thinks like that.

    We spend more on welfare than defense, that is the fault of the last Government who had 14 years to change that, it is NOT the fault of disabled/incapacitated people. A sign of a coward, a sign of a bully is when they pick on what they believe to be the weakest. 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 1 months ago
    I wonder if this so-called committee would also like their wages and expenses cut right down to the bone, or even completely stopped.

    What do they get over £300 quid a day + expenses, just to doss around and blow hot wind & nodd off in the bargain.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 1 months ago
      @MrFibro Nice work. Get paid to doze off in a heated building. Whilst moralising about the cost of the poor, sick and disabled. Then off to the HOC subsidised bar afterwards. 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 1 months ago
      @MrFibro It is 361/day From April 24 plus expenses  and 342/day currently. Plus expenses. Of course, they will agree with the government
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 1 months ago
    Yet another ignorant report that has consulted zero disabled people or organisations supporting them. 

    That tiresome old twaddle about "focusing on what people can do rather than what they can't" appears again. How can you determine eligibility for disability benefits that way? Unless you are in a coma virtually everyone could theoretically do some work at some point in a perfect world. Meanwhile back in reality...(not a place these pampered, entitled Lords frequently inhabit)
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 1 months ago
    Scapegoating the disabled and sick for their failures with the economy
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 1 months ago
    I'm so unwell, I have multiple auto immune diseases that are incurable.

     On top of these illnesses I have awful side effects from my multitude of medications. 

     I'm sick of being vilified for being unwell, abd always having to worry about the pittance I get, being taken away from me.

     All this cuts, green paper, white paper, vouchers, reforms is now starting to take a real toll on my mental health.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 1 months ago
    I agree that if people return to work, they should not be at risk of immediately losing benefits; or, if the job proves unsuitable, they should not be immediately faced with having to reapply for these benefits. I think that some of the increase is disability benefits is that the increasing cost of living has encouraged more people who have a health condition to report this in order to get enough income to get by. Also with the increase in State Pension Age there are older people claiming Universal Credit who in previous years would be drawing a pension. Having more work coaches for those on incapacity benefit is fine but what specialist training are they going to receive, what is their caseload going to be and are they going to be able to offer tailored support? 

  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 1 months ago
    Do you think this may affect/apply to Atendance Allowance both my parents 89 & 95 yo rely on?
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 1 months ago
      @clearwater No. They are just going after people of working age with regards to this bit of legislation. 
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      · 1 months ago
      @Matt So I'm 67 in March retired and nearly 3 years into a 10 year award, not due until 2032. Am I in the firing line I wonder 
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      · 1 months ago
      @clearwater I wouldn't have thought so - the focus is those of working age, eg 18-67
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 1 months ago
    If people return to work, they should not be at risk of immediately losing benefits; or, if the job proves unsuitable, they should not be immediately faced with having to reapply for these benefits.

    Thats a good thing. 


    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 1 months ago
      @axab43 I disagree, I have known people try to claim job seekers after leaving jobs because it was affecting their mental health and it has fallen on deaf ears at the job centre, one was a best mate of mine who was sanctioned despite saying he was bullied at work. He was told to find something else.

       "If this person was suffering from mental health illness, you comment could seriously upset them and push them further into a pit." 

      Sorry but don't patronise me and try and put a guilt trip on me, I have long term mental health disorders/conditions myself! But I won't delude myself with untrue positives, I prefer to keep a depressive realism, which is nothing to do with "horror stories".  If people don't want to read about reality then ignore my comments and read yours instead, a nice imaginary comfort blanket which might be removed causing a big shock. I would rather be up front from the beginning. 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 1 months ago
      @MJ If this person was suffering from mental health illness, you comment could seriously upset them and push them further into a pit.

      If anyone is in such a place of a job being unsuitable, they should go to the Citizens Advice Bureaux, who could advise them and tell them how to word their objection to the job.   The DWP cannot say a job if suitable for someone if it is affecting their mental or physical health, as they cannot go inside their mind.

      Again, can we try and be a little more positive instead of just telling people horror stories that could cause them more worry/suffering?
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 1 months ago
      @Gary You will have to prove the job was unsuitable, and what if they don't think it was? And even if they concede it may have been they will coerce people to apply for other jobs. They will try their damn hardest not to allow a person to go back on to benefits, you will be trapped.  
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 1 months ago
      @Gary Following my earlier comment, the government and the DWP have been paying these self-styled gurus, such as, Alan Milburn, to concoct reports on benefits and make recommendations, to shift any blame or wrong-doing from themselves and just say, "Ah, this is from the experts in the field and not necessarily a mere government policy".
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 1 months ago
      @Gary That was the Tories' plan, I'm afraid.

      As Labour have been paying some self-styled gurus, like Alan Milburn, to concoct reports on benefits and make recommendations, some of them have recommended that in order to be able to go back on the same previous benefits, people must have tried to stay in work for a minimum period of two years.

      Apart from their proposal of paying PIP in vouchers, etc., the Tories' plan was way preferable compared to what Keir Starmer's Labour are mumbling. In case you think I'm a Tory voter, be assured I always voted for Labour, except the last election on which I voted the Greens just for the sake of not voting Keir Starmer's Labour, as it was clear to me that Keir Starmer didn't stand for anything whatsoever, neither did he have any policies, ideologies, programme, etc, and that he was all after becoming prime minister. I wish I was wrong.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 1 months ago
    "Work Capability Assessment (WCA) is not rigorous enough and susceptible to error."

    At least hundreds, and probably thousands, have been driven into early graves after having their support wrongly cut off because of the WCA. Just how "rigorous" do they want to make it? It's "susceptible to error" all right, but not in the way they think.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 1 months ago
      @tintack My thought is, it will ultimately put the NHS six foot under, and surely unresurectable.
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