Yorkshire Post

MP calls for review into deaths linked to benefits system

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CONCERNS OVER deaths linked to benefits system difficulti­es should prevent a Government department “marking its own homework”, Ministers have been told.

Labour MP Debbie Abrahams, who was born in Sheffield, claimed there is “growing evidence” of sick and disabled people in receipt of social security support having died prematurel­y.

An independen­t review into the deaths is required to find out if Government “incompeten­ce or a cover-up” has failed to protect vulnerable claimants, the former Shadow Work and Pensions Secretary added.

Ms Abrahams, the MP for Oldham East and Saddlewort­h, has been a long-term critic of the Department for Work and Pensions’ (DWP) handling of cases for some vulnerable claimants, including reassessme­nt of disabled people and sanctions.

She recently fought back tears during a Commons debate as she read out the names of people who have died after experienci­ng difficulti­es with the system, spending almost three minutes listing more than 20 cases.

The DWP has also faced questions over its decision not to retain reviews linked to deaths of benefits claimants, which include suicides or alleged suicides.

In response to a freedom of informatio­n request, the department said records prior to 2015/16 have been “destroyed or are incomplete in line with GDPR/data retention policies”.

The National Audit Office has also said the suicides of 69 welfare claimants have been investigat­ed by the Government but the true scale could be far higher.

The watchdog, in a report released in February, said only nine internal process reviews arose from communicat­ions with coroners, 19 were prompted by media reports while others were triggered by claimants’ families.

Ms Abrahams, who is a member of the Work and Pensions Committee, said: “With the DWP’s destructio­n of ‘peer reviews’ records into claimants’ deaths prior to 2015, and their failure to supply coroners’ reports that they held to the independen­t reviewers of the work capability assessment process, I’m afraid the time has passed for the DWP to be marking its own homework.

“Nothing more than a fully

independen­t review into social security claimants’ deaths will do.

“Others need to decide whether Government incompeten­ce or a cover up has failed to protect vulnerable claimants.

“They also need to examine which factors in the social security system are associated with an increased prevalence of these deaths and the additional health risk that they pose.

“Is it the poverty and destitutio­n claimants have faced as a result of the inadequacy of social security support?

“Is it the social security policies themselves, for example, the work capability assessment and personal independen­ce payment assessment­s, sanctions, or Universal Credit?

“Is it how the policies are implemente­d with the drive to get claimants ‘off flow’? Or is it a combinatio­n of these factors?”

A DWP spokeswoma­n said: “We take these issues extremely seriously and ensure cases are investigat­ed and any lessons learned.

“Further to these reviews we establishe­d the independen­t serious case panel to identify systemic issues and are urgently working to drive forward improvemen­ts in the system.”

In February Work and Pensions Minister Justin Tomlinson said: “Day in, day out, DWP as a department interacts with many, many people – around 20 million each year – and a number of these are some of the most vulnerable in our society. In the vast majority of interactio­ns with these people we get it right.

“The wellbeing of everyone who interacts with DWP is of the utmost importance. That is why we improve support and guidance for staff on how best to support vulnerable people and are constantly looking at our processes, striving for continuous improvemen­t.”

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