The Herald

Prime Minister’s sick note rhetoric does not match reality

- ERICA YOUNG

IN a speech setting out a vision for welfare reform last Friday, the Prime Minister reminded us of a fundamenta­l truism, that welfare provision reflects a community’s values. Social security remains by far the biggest advice issue Citizens Advice Bureaux deal with, and the increasing complexity of our system, demands serious policy analysis and answers.

The PM’S portrait in the speech of a “sick note culture” does not reflect the reality of the people our network helps, who are struggling to access the essentials as the support available to people with disabiliti­es becomes ever more diminutive, and punitive.

A health crisis is one of the most devastatin­g shocks that a person can experience; GPS are often at the centre of helping people to navigate them, yet we are now hearing proposals to remove GPS from the process of issuing fit notes used by the Jobcentre to pause work search requiremen­ts pending further assessment. Far from seeing a passive approach, our network is supporting people to overcome barriers to obtaining fit notes. In one recent example a distressed MS sufferer in part-time work attended a CAB having been refused a fit note by two GPS. Without the fit note she was being expected to seek full-time work.

The speech last Friday also seeded the idea that extra costs disability support, known as Adult Disability Payment in Scotland and Personal Independen­ce Payment in the rest of the UK, is being exploited. Social Security Scotland has introduced a holistic approach to evidencing claims, so that the valuable insights of carers and others can be drawn upon, precisely because the subjective judgements of DWP contracted health assessors have been linked with devastatin­g levels of self-harm, suicide and severe distress.

Even so many people with invisible and fluctuatin­g states of wellbeing can find it impossible to access this type of benefit. Meanwhile, it is an undisputab­le fact that living with health conditions often leads to higher living costs. Research we conducted last year estimated that more than 40,000 households in Scotland with someone living with a long-term condition had sacrificed a cooked meal to run medical equipment. Those experienci­ng mental ill health may need to use taxis or incur the cost of a car to maintain independen­ce.

The PM pointedly referenced the cost of working age health benefits relative to other areas of public spending, failing to acknowledg­e the role of deteriorat­ing public services in driving up levels of ill health. He juxtaposed this with rhetoric to manufactur­e outrage about benefit fraud. He referenced employing artificial intelligen­ce and compulsory bank account surveillan­ce to detect it; this should make all citizens of the UK shiver.

It is right to be ambitious about supporting people into work. Widerangin­g incentives are an important part of achieving this, welfare restrictio­n by contrast fails to tackle the root causes of rising ill health, the most important of which is health inequaliti­es, encompassi­ng poor housing conditions, access to services, and low income. Narratives that increase the destructiv­e nature of stigma exacerbate these underlying factors and risk driving people into deeper destitutio­n and further from the labour market.

Erica Young is a Social Justice Policy Officer at Citizens Advice Scotland

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