This depends a lot on who is given responsibility for assessing the severity of a person's condition.
I agree with this, especially if rather than NHS doctors or specialists, private companies are paid to find people fit for work, whether they are or not - similar to what is already being done.
Realising that these aren't necessarily your own words
@Kas_Can_Fly, I feel annoyed at people saying things like
They are not my words and I do agree with what you say about the extremity distracting from the serious discussion. However, I have read more than enough stories where people have been left completely stranded with no money for food, bills or rent after being sanctioned (often wrongly so) and that this can occur if you are in the work-related activity group of Employment Support Allowance and Jobseekers. Food bank use supports this and you are only allowed to use a food bank twice in a year, what about all the other weeks?
There have to be some checks on the benefits system, and some responsibility on the part of claimants to do what they can for themselves. I think melodramatic phrases like this undermine the more serious discussion about finding the right balance.
I agree entirely, I just feel that these tests should be conducted only by trained doctors or
related specialists and not occupational therapists, physiotherapists and other nursing fields that may not have an adequate understanding the multitude of disorders and problems that come their way. I also believe that professionals in the applicants life views and findings (therapists, psychiatrists, surgeons, pain management etc, etc.) should always play a part in the decision and should hold at least 50% hold in the matter. The current tests have been deemed not fit for purpose by the General Medical Council as well as by nurses, doctors and psychs all over the country.
Wouldn't this type of scheme mean that individuals who find it hard to reach out for help, have it handed to them on a plate?
In my albeit limited experiences, more often than not it's the case, you rarely get anything that requires any serious people hours, mostly likely you'll get an SSRI from your GP without warning of the side-effects and if you encounter any, you'll be told that's normal and you should put up with it.
There are people who abuse the benefits system, not nearly so many as the Daily Mail claims, but there are.
0.7% is the official figure for benefit fraud. There is also a 1.2% for benefit errors by the DWP that could potentially be spun into benefit fraud as these overpayments are for the most part not returned unless the DWP notices their mistakes and chase them down.
Edit: I just want to add that I agree with
@cherryblossom that it is a good thing this discussion was started. It doesn't mean that things exactly have to go along with the proposed plans, that's what a discussion is for.
Hence being located in the discussion section of the forum ^_^
There are people who abuse the benefits system, not nearly so many as the Daily Mail claims, but there are. This may pick up a few but would it really achieve a great deal? If I were a cynic (surely not) I'd say people will be offered 12 CBT sessions over the phone and prozac / tri-cyclics / beta blockers and that'll probably be it.I can't imagine they'll start testing to see if people are actually taking the pills, so that could be a dead end anyway. CBT is cheap and you need to complete, what, 3 cycles before they offer something else. And most people won't get 3 cycles. What is offered may not be enough, in many cases.
The key thing would seem to be the word "refusal". Would that mean "do not take any treatment", "do not complete course of treatment" or "want alternative treatment"?
I agree with all of this, I too appear to be a cynic!