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Disability news roundup: Work capability assessment investigated

Emma Emma | 14:20 UK time, Friday, 3 August 2012

Newspaper front pages

Earlier this week, Ö÷²¥´óÐã and Channel 4 both broadcast investigative reports into the work capability assessment. Run by Atos for the Department for Work and Pensions, this controversial test is designed to determine whether sick and disabled people are fit for work.

Channel 4's Dispatches programme investigated how doctors and health professionals are trained to do the test, and the Panorama film spoke to sick and disabled people who have been called in for an assessment.

One of the issues raised was how many sick and disabled people are declared fit for work and subsequently have this decision overturned on appeal. put this figure at 30 percent in an article reporting that Chris Grayling had been "accused of trying to censor a Ministry of Justice courts service information video that helps people appealing against decisions to remove their disability and sickness benefit".

The TV investigations left papers looking for answers. In a blog post for The Independent, Christina Patterson asked if Lib Dem And in an open letter for the Daily Mail, Sonia Poulton wondered of the Labour party leader,

Writing in , Minister Chris Grayling said: "Of course not everyone is able to work - in many cases people are simply too unwell and that's why they are rightly entitled to unconditional employment and support allowance. And far from the draconian picture some seek to paint, we've actually made changes which mean more people now end up in this support group."

It was announced on Thursday that, in addition to carrying out the work capability assessments, .

Elsewhere in the news

(The Independent, Friday 3 August)

Chronic fatigue syndrome: Brain training is most cost-effective treatment (Ö÷²¥´óÐã News, thursday 2 August)

(The Independent, Thursday 2 August)

Mild mental illness 'raises risk of premature death' (Ö÷²¥´óÐã News, Wednesday 1 August)

(The Independent, Wednesday 1 August)

Forced marriage advice to help victims with learning disabilities (Ö÷²¥´óÐã News, Wednesday 1 August)

(The Guardian, Tuesday 31 July)

(Blogs - The Independent, Tuesday 31 July)

Diabetic foot care 'appalling' (Ö÷²¥´óÐã News, Tuesday 31 July)

Benefit cheats 'colour attitudes to disabled people' (Ö÷²¥´óÐã News, Tuesday 31 July)

(Blogs - Independent, Tuesday 31 July)

(The Independent, Monday 30 July)

(The Telegraph, Monday 30 July)

Comments

  • Comment number 1.

    Shame you chose to ignore the weeks biggest news, DWP working with MIND have devised a new set of descriptors, these determine the WCA not ATOS
    The new ones deal mainly in the previously neglected area of mental health.
    Other charities now working to improve descriptors relating to Blind & the Deaf, so the cup isnt half empty its half full

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