The DWP has announced that 1,000 existing work coaches will be transferred to supporting sick and disabled claimants  in 2025/26, with 65,000 claimants getting “intensive voluntary support” to move into work.

The DWP say that work coaches will be offering support to claimants on health-related benefits, including those who are furthest away from work.

Coaches will provide “tailored and personalised employment support” and help claimants access support with writing CVs and interview techniques.

The DWP say that the redeployed work coaches are a “downpayment” on plans to overhaul employment support, due to be announced before the end of the month. 

At the same time as making the announcement, the DWP released figures from a survey which shows that:

44% of disabled people and people with a health condition don’t trust the DWP to help people reach their full career potential.

Nearly 2 in 5 (39%) disabled people and people with a health condition do not trust DWP to take its customers’ needs into account in how it provides services.

In the same announcement, the DWP claim that “the number of working-age people on the health element of Universal Credit or claiming Employment Support Allowance (ESA) has risen to 3.1 million, a staggering 319% increase since the pandemic, reflecting the alarming rate at which young and working aged people are increasingly falling out of work and claiming incapacity benefits.” 

However, if the government wishes to encourage companies to employ more disabled workers, the recent claim by disability minister Stephen Timms that the Access To Work programme is “unsustainable” is unlikely to help.

Access To Work provides grants for reasonable adjustments to help disabled people stay in employment.  The average payment is around £5,000.

But giving evidence to the work and pensions committee last month, Timms complained that “we used to talk about Access to Work as the best-kept secret because nobody really knew about it and employers did not know about it. That seems to have changed in the last two years and there has been an enormous surge in applications for Access to Work.”

As a result, some people are waiting many months for their application to be dealt with. 

Timms told the committee that the government plans to place more of the onus on employers to pay for adjustments, because “the current style of Access to Work is unlikely to be sustainable in the long term”.

As long as the DWP’s focus is on trying to improve the CV’s and interview techniques of disabled claimants, rather than support and encourage companies to employ disabled people, the efforts of work coaches seem doomed.

You can read “Government bolsters employment support to unlock work for sick and disabled people” here.

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  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 1 days ago
    To ask the obvious.
    Why isn't this site moderated to remove trolls that have nothing to contribute to the discussion.
    They have either been planted here or have their own twisted agenda.
    I really don't understand.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 21 hours ago
      @KC001 Because everyone is entitled to an opinion, even if you don't like it.
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      · 22 hours ago
      @KC001 You can flag the post if you feel that it warrants it. The problem is you don't need to register with an e-mail to post on here.

      All you have to do is hit reply, compose your post, choose a name that you want to be associated to the post, and hit reply.

      I don't think there is any way the site could be moderated because of that, though I could be wrong.
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      · 1 days ago
      @KC001 Are you referring to someone who's name begins with B? Well everyone is allowed their view even if you don't agree with them, just down vote them like the vast majority do when they post. Makes me laugh to see all those down votes. 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 1 days ago
    "But the Resolution Foundation said only about 3% of the hundreds of thousands of people likely to lose benefit payments were likely to find a job."


    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cx2898n721yo
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    · 1 days ago
    Again people if anyone is forced to go to a work interview at the end explain you are disabled and how your disability effects you, be honest with the potential employer and ask them if their insurance would cover them of you had a accident at work - 🤔 
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      · 19 hours ago
      @WorkshyLayabout That is all i can put on my CV.
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      · 20 hours ago
      @Not so Great Britain Instead of writing a CV listing employment history (none/bugger all for some of us) and education, we can provide employers with a record of our health problems, medication we're on, therapy we're getting, expected amount of time needed off work, etc. 

      We all know that employers only take on the disabled because they are forced to.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 1 days ago
    Sample email to Labour MP (amend and email your Labour MP)

    I hope this email finds you well. I am writing to express my strong opposition to the proposed cuts to disability benefits, which would severely impact the lives of those who are already facing immense challenges.

    Disability benefits are a vital lifeline for many individuals and families across the country, ensuring that those living with disabilities can meet their basic needs and maintain a level of dignity and independence. Cutting these benefits would exacerbate existing inequalities, increase poverty, and place additional strain on already overstretched public services.

    For many disabled people, these benefits are not just a source of financial support—they are a critical means of access to healthcare, mobility aids, housing, and other services that enable them to lead as independent and fulfilling a life as possible. Removing or reducing this support would not only undermine their ability to thrive but could also lead to worsening mental and physical health outcomes.

    I urge you to reconsider the proposed cuts and instead focus on policies that promote inclusivity, accessibility, and equality for all individuals, regardless of their abilities. Our society should stand by its most vulnerable members, ensuring that they are empowered and supported, not left behind.

    Thank you for your time and consideration. I trust you will stand up for the rights of disabled individuals and work towards a fairer and more compassionate approach to welfare reform.

    If Labour push these reforms through  - I am millions others will never vote Labour again. Show yourselves not be a delusional tory party 

  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 1 days ago
    Just signed it
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 1 days ago
    Please sign and support disability

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    · 1 days ago
    Hi I have severe migraines every week which am in bed a couple of days a week followed by sickness and dizziness. My mental health issues have been on going and I get ongoing support for that. I was asked by work coach whilst I was in bed for two days was I watching TV. I said I was in a dark room in bed with ice pack on my head. Not watching TV . She said headaches can be managed. I said migraines are different to just having an headache they knock me of my feet 
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      · 26 minutes ago
      @Sid They ignored mine,migraine with aura,vertigo massive pain right down to shoulder blades and oscillopcia ( shaking vision) nil points,deffo over 50% of days in a year,they ignored my dysmotility even though I ended up on ensure drinks for nutrition, couldn't make it up
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      · 8 hours ago
      @The Dogmother @The Dogmother I’m migrating across now I’ve left esa wish I was still on it try stay on it as long as you can enjoy the time the migration is going ok but the universal credit system is awful it’s cruel strict jumping threw hoops and demanding this and that being bullied already by them 
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      · 20 hours ago
      @Anon @Anon i swear I'd rather be dead than suffer the sickening pain. 
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      · 23 hours ago
      @Anon @Anon oh yes. Referred pain is awful. I've just been diagnosed with NAFLD.  Non alcoholic fatty liver disease, and I've now 13 conditions.  Trying to cope with all the constant pain is ridiculous. 
      I try to do without painkillers for my livers sake, it's so v v hard to do. I can't do without my five heart meds each day. It's a juggle, but I suffer a fair bit. Pip assessors don't give a  fig.. they've no clue about our conditions. They trivialise everything. Ridiculous  
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      · 1 days ago
      @The Dogmother When they strike me,the one sided pain goes right down to the bottom of my shoulder blade,that's after the hour long aura  then vertigo hits and it can last 5 days, awful to live with and yet totally ignored by the pip assessor 
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    · 1 days ago
    Not gonna happen! They won't pass this bill.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 1 days ago
    Liz Kendall says that receiving a wage slip at the end of the week gives you self respect and pride.
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      · 12 hours ago
      @Bert I know!  How bad is that in America?  I couldn't believe how low people can get paid but on the opposite end, if you have a trade (building or motor industry) you get paid well compared to the U.K. 
      I have been watching some YT channels and the price of food is really high.  It's insane, no wonder so many people are having to get two jobs.

      I just don't believe life is supposed to be like this.  Nobody should have to struggle with food and standard utility bills.   Companies would get so much more productivity if people weren't worrying about mortgage payments or utility bills going through the roof.
      It is criminal what they are doing to us.  Unless we all stand up and say no more, they'll keep doing it.  They know people can die from stress, they just drain peoples money trying to stay well, just to keep working to pay bills.

      How can anyone be happy like that? The real people of any nation are the ones with the "ordinary" jobs that keeps the economy going.  Every nation is run as a corporation, Trump slipped up and said "company" instead of country talking about the tariffs and how Canada had "treated their company very very bad, very bad indeed". 

      It's only ever about the oligarchs and their profit margin.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 20 hours ago
      @Scorpion Minimum in UK is good when you compare it too America by far the richest country in the world
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      · 1 days ago
      @bert Liz Kendall is trying to fool people, but she's only making herself an object of ridicule. She knows the reality perfectly well, as she's from one of the poorest constituencies in the country.

      She should remind herself that currently 38% of Universal Credit claimants are in work.

      If a wage slip gives such a self respect and pride, as she's dishonestly claiming it, why do all the above people still need to claim Universal Credit while working?


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      · 1 days ago
      @bert There wage slips (sorry money paid in bank) are a lot more than we get. My friend works full time had to take weekend job just to keep on top of bills as everything keeps going up. Let them live of  regular wages see how they cope. See they didn't turn down there pay rises in parliament. Different world they live in 
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      · 1 days ago
      @bert So she has no self respect and pride then? Because she sure as hell don't get a weekly pay slip.
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    · 2 days ago
    First time post. Long-term sick here. After 2 bouts of cancer, I've been riddled with widespread auto-immune disease & zero immunity (IgG levels down to 0.2). I keep getting infections. Last time I saw a work coach was early 2020, just before COVID. I asked: "Frankly, would you employ someone with my health issues"? His reply: " No disrespect, but I wouldn't". I suspect similar applies to most long-term sick or those disabled on this forum. While any government could do more to help younger, healthy people into work (UK has some 987,000 so-called NEETS), what's being proposed for us seems very misguided indeed, to put it mildly. Probably more intended to appeal to the media. 

    I didn't vote Labour this time as I suspected their silence was telling. But the Tories were really no better, at the end expediting migration to UC despite it causing no end of fear & misery. Labour only seem worse because many expected far more compassion from them. Patently, neither can be trusted. 

    Like others, I believe that much of what's proposed is likely to be legally challenged, so plenty of delays, & may apply to new claims. To apply it to everyone, including more frequent reassessments, would take too much added expense & time. But we'll know more soon enough. - Stay strong & GLA. 
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    · 2 days ago
    These MPs need to live in a day of our lives. I’ve spent the entire morning fighting a panic attack to the point I almost called an ambulance .. I’ve been battling them for 20 years almost. I’ve seen psychiatrists, I’ve tried every therapy there is to try and get better but nothing can undo the life traumas I’ve gone through, nothing can bring back my entire family I’ve lost one by one to cancer, nothing can help. Do I want to be like this? Absolutely not!!! It’s destroyed my life, would I love to be a normal functioning member of society? Absolutely yes! Alongside my mental health issues I have multiple physical ones too. This just isn’t fair!! Why are we all seen as lazy people????
    Sorry for the long post! I needed to rant! 
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    · 2 days ago
    Reading media coverage and non-disabled people's comments regarding these proposed 'reforms' has made me realise that we benefit claimants are viewed as lying lazy scum. This makes me feel personally attacked and, to be honest, has really upset me. I didn't know we were so hated :(
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      · 1 days ago
      @Richard Don't let it get you down.  The majority of the people on those comment pages are actually the minority, most people are compassionate.  They write horrible stuff like that because they are either trolls or have believed all the right-wing press attacks and have never met people in our condition.
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      · 1 days ago
      @Richard Hi Richard, It's horrible but I wouldn't take it personally. What we're seeing is the end result of well over a decade of propaganda and divide and rule tactics. People who express these bigoted views just hate their own miserable lives and need someone else to blame for their own inadequacies and failures. People become bitter, resentful and petty. It used to be the EU, then it was 'immigrants' and this week it's 'benefit scroungers'...

      People also say things online and in the media that they wouldn't dare say face-to-face and may not even really believe at all. A lot of this stuff is said performatively for the upvotes, clicks and views. And if some people are genuinely hateful and do mean it? I'd rather they take their masks off so we know exactly who they are anyway. Hope you're OK and don't let a few idiots get you down.
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      · 1 days ago
      @Richard Anywhere it is perceived (incorrectly) that the disabled/sick receive free money.....it causes a lot of resentment amongst those at the bottom of the pay scale
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    · 2 days ago
    Does anyone know exactly when we can expect to see the Green Paper and actual (rather than media speculation) details of the benefits cuts.  I'm on leave from Thursday so would like to have the time to actually read their proposals in their entirety before commenting, but the leaks last week suggest it is going to be pretty savage.
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      · 1 days ago
      @Matt The Chancellor's Spring Statement will be given on March 26th. I've read that the Green Paper is also due to be published on that same date, but essentially no-one seems to know for sure right now.
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    · 2 days ago
    Giving more money to those disabled but able to do some work would be taken through the High court as it is disability discrimination which is illegal.All this talk of giving one group of unemployed more than another will result in chaos.More testing they shout,they can’t even keep up with assessments now,leave alone do more.The only thing they can do is change the system for new claimants .If they wanted to ramp up assessments they would not get the money saving they need.Scandalous treatment of people in need,hope there are some lawyers ready to take on the fight.
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    · 2 days ago
    Why don't they leave us alone 😔 😪 my experience with the work coaches during my esa migration was horrific. They was absolutely clueless to autism and bipolar and made me feel like I was thick. This labour government are ten times worse than the torys cant believe im even saying that but it's true. Get youre seat belts folks gonna be a bumpy 4 years 
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    · 2 days ago
    @Scorpion, well jsa and esa are legacy benefits and are supposed both to have been migrated to uc and ended by April next year, so what tosh is this about merging them? Just shows Kendall et al haven't a clue even about what is already happening. They're just spewing out desperate and incoherent nonsense. When the green paper comes it will have no concrete plans whatsoever, just more of the same babble.
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    · 2 days ago
    Keir Starmer's Labour and its DWP are inflicting serious mental torture upon to disabled and sick people.

    I'm glad I didn't vote for Keir Starmer's Labour in the last general election, albeit being a Labour voter, as I saw the writing on the wall. I voted for the Greens just for not voting anything has to do with Keir Starmer - the epitome of a dishonest
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 2 days ago
    Hi everyone, 

    I just read in I paper that the plans for disability benefits will be unveiled this week.

    We have to stay united and reject their shameful plans for PIP and other disability benefits.

    It is worth mentioning that I have contacted my MP to make it clear that the reported changes are deeply damaging disabled people and their carers.


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      · 2 days ago
      @Steve I have sent a long email to my MP this morning. I think it is important to get in early so that MPs are aware that they will be facing strong opposition to the cuts. I researched thoroughly and included lots of statistics about the impacts of austerity on disabled people. I also alluded to local poverty and the huge unemployment in my area, and asked how there could be any outcome other than pushing people into further poverty.
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    · 2 days ago
    It's time to time out the media and wait for the day of green paper just remember just because something is on paper it may not go through if it does it gets challenged and It will as for the Muppet   seen on live on a news channel  saying labour have nothing to worry about there's to many of them well  she forgot when you put everyone like MPs charities disabled people  who are against cuts together labour are outnumbered the women forgot a few things have already been won in the high court this year and it won't stop as soon as that sat on report  gets given to who ever asked for it more people gonna move to support another party and  not labour and labour my be in the name for that  party but shame and embarrassment will be to hang on people something will workout in the end as for the media by next year they'll have nothing but the truth to report not lies and more lies .
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      · 18 hours ago
      @Bert But thanks for the reassuring comment as if I was really worried about this, your comment would just push me further into really bad depression. This is why I said we have to try and be positive on this groups as things like mental illness can be dangerous if pushed to extreme.
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      · 18 hours ago
      @Bert Maybe for PIP, but it won't for the other benefit as anxiety and depression can be more debilitating than a lot of physical illnesses.. And as I've said, by the time they get round to bringing all this in, I'll be near pension age anyway.  
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      · 1 days ago
      @axab43 Can't see Anxiety and Depression qualifying as the government have hinted before that those conditions are low hanging fruit
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      · 1 days ago
      @Angela Probably 18 months
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      · 2 days ago
      @Jim Anxiety and depression will have to qualify. I have severe depression, can't go out and hardly function. What will probably happen is they will make it harder for moderate anxiety and depression to qualify by changing the point scorers. 
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    · 2 days ago
    "The plan, to be unveiled by Work and Pensions Secretary Liz Kendall, involves the merger of Jobseeker's Allowance and the Employment and Support Allowance for those with a disability or health condition.

    The scheme would offer time-limited support, with all claimants required to be actively seeking work. This comes as Labour pursues a "moral duty to get Britain working again".

    Nearly all disabled people and those with long-term health conditions would have to take part in discussions about employment support under the new benefit."


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      · 1 days ago
      @Scorpion *one of these people 
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      · 1 days ago
      @Scorpion Job Seekers Allowance hasn't existed for quite some time and Contribution Based ESA is being replaced by Universal Credit too. They do producer some ill informed waffle! I keep reading that the WCA is being reformed for PIP-the WCA isn't even the assessment used for PIP as we well know. I really wish politicians would take the time to find out what actually happens already before trying to change it. Grrrrr. Rant over. Love and solidarity to everyone on here 🫂🤗
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      · 1 days ago
      @Dannan Yep, that was my take on it. Thanks for the clarification.👍
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      · 2 days ago
      @Jonno New Style Jobseekers Allowance and New Style Employment And Support Allowance are current contribution based benefits, and are not being phased out like the "Old Style" claims. I think they are referring to the New Style JSA and ESA.
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      · 2 days ago
      @Scorpion That's interesting if correct, because the vast majority of us will be migrating from ESA to UC and are already existing claimants so will not be affected by this. Unless they are planning on stopping the migration? I wonder what "delights" they have in store for people on UC.

      I think it's best to wait for the announcement and the Green Paper as many have said on here because the stories emanating from the media seem contradictory.