Disability test to take thousands off sick list

Mon Nov 19, 2007 11:36am GMT
 
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LONDON (Reuters) - The government is to change the way disability is assessed in the hope of removing thousands of people from long-term incapacity benefit, Work and Pensions Secretary Peter Hain said on Monday.

A new test to be introduced from October will check people's abilities rather than disabilities, he said.

"The old test has been reliant on a physical incapacity. The new one is going to test people as to what they can do," Hain told the BBC.

"Can you sit in front of a PC screen and operate a keyboard or a mouse, rather than can you do a physically demanding job in an old industrial setting?"

He said people with mental health problems such as depression -- one of the most common disabling conditions -- would be assessed to see if they could be helped by psychological therapy to get them back to work.

Around 2.7 million people claim the benefit for not being able to work at an annual cost of 12.5 billion pounds.

The number on the benefit has trebled since 1979 and the government wants to reduce those claiming by one million people.

The revised test will be applied first to new applicants, and will be extended at a later date to those already claiming.

Hain said the changes were designed to help people, not to punish them.  Continued...

 
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