Post by Madhatter on Jun 6, 2013 11:37:08 GMT
32 die a week after failing test for new incapacity benefit
By Nick Sommerlad on April 4, 2012 11:00 PM in Health
More than a thousand Âsickness benefit claimants died last year after being told to get a job, we can reveal.
We've highlighted worries about the controversial medical tests for people claiming Employment Support Allowance which are being used to slash the country's welfare bill.
The Government has boasted that more than half of new Âclaimants are found "fit to work" - failing to mention that over 300,000 have appealed the decision and almost 40% have won.
Instead, employment minister Chris Grayling (below) says this Â"emphasises what a complete waste of human lives the current system has been".
We've used the Freedom of Information Act to discover that, between January and August last year, 1,100 claimants died after they were put in the "work-related activity group".
This group - which accounted for 21% of all claimants at the last count - get a lower rate of benefit for one year and are expected to go out and find work.
This compares to 5,300 deaths of people who were put in the "support group" - which accounts for 22% of claimants - for the most unwell, who get the full, no-strings benefit of up to £99.85 a week.
We don't know how many people died after being found "fit to work", the third group, as that information was "not available".
But we have also found that 1,600 people died before their assessment had been completed.
This should take 13 weeks, while the claimant gets a reduced payment of up to £67.50 a week, but delays have led to claims the system is in "meltdown".
Mr Grayling admitted last month that 35,000 people are waiting longer than 13 weeks. Commenting on the deaths of Âclaimants, a Department for Work and Pensions official said: "It is possible that the claimant had already closed their claim and then Âsubsequently died, meaning that these figures may be Âoverestimating the true picture."
Of course, they're bound to include some people who died of Âsomething completely unrelated to their benefit claim.
blogs.mirror.co.uk/investigations/2012/04/32-die-a-week-after-failing-in.html