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pip.
- judy52
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- slugsta
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Welcome to Benefits and Work
Have a look at our PIP guide as this explains the criteria against which your husband will be assessed.
PIP help for claimants
There are two mobility descriptors - the first one relates to people with sensory, mental health and cognitive issues, the second relates to physical problems. It is undoubtedly easier to get Enhanced Mobility if the claimant can score against both of these descriptors.
May I suggest that you bookmark/favourite this on your web browser now so that you can find it easily in future? This will allow you to return with further questions or comments about your husband's PIP without having to start a new topic each time. We ask members to keep everything relating to the same claim in one topic as it helps us enormously - and I hope you will find it useful to

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- judy52
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- Gordon
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judy wrote: Thanks for your reply, I have read all the notes on your pip guide, and even thought i have written quite a bit about my husband not being able to use public transport, it is more physical than mental ability for the first descriptor. I am confused as to the distance he can walk , as the Atos assessor put down that he can walk up to 25 metres in 30 minutes stopping 5-6 times, if you divide this, it works out as 1.2 metres in just over a minute. Is this distance and timescale within the 12 point category?
You will need to make use of "reliably".
The distance of 25m only qualifies your husband for the standard rate, so you need to show that he cannot walk the distance within a "reasonable time period" and that due to the number of stops that he requires that he is not walking to "an acceptable standard". See the guide for a more detailed explanation.
Gordon
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- judy52
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- Gordon
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judy wrote: if he can walk 25 metres in 30 mins including 5-6 stops, that is 1.2 metres per minute. would that information be regarded as a reasonable time period?
The 1.2m per minute would come under "acceptable standard" and the 30 minutes would be "reasonable time period".
Gordon
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