The DWP has published the results of a survey today which they claim shows that 200,000 people claiming health and disability benefits are ready for work now, if the right job or support were available.

The survey has been released to coincide with time To Talk day, which encourages people to talk about their mental health.  Its findings include:

  • 27% of customers felt they might be able to work in future but only if their health improved. Customers with mental health conditions were more likely to feel this way: 44% of customers whose main health condition was a mental health condition felt they might be able to work again if their health improved.
  • 5% - approximately 200,000 - customers felt they could work right away if the right job or support was available. Customers whose main health condition was a cognitive or neurodevelopmental impairment—including memory and concentration problems  alongside learning difficulties and disabilities, as well as autism—were around twice as likely to feel this way compared to other customers.
  • 49% of customers felt they would never be able to work or work again. 62% of these customers were over the age of 50, and 66% felt their health was likely to get worse in the future.
  • The findings indicate a link between take up of health and disability benefits and challenges in the healthcare system: two in five customers (41%) were on a waiting list for treatment for their health condition(s), and half (50%) who were out of work felt their ability to work was dependent on receiving treatment.
  • There is a potential opportunity in the rise of homeworking. A quarter (25%) of customers felt they couldn’t work, but when asked if they could work from home said they could. But customers were worried about the risk of social isolation and tended to see homeworking as a stepping stone to in-person work.
  • A key challenge is the complex relationship many customers have with DWP. Of those customers not in work who didn’t rule out work permanently, 60% were worried that DWP would make them look for unsuitable work, and 50% were worried they would not get their benefits back if they tried working.

Work and Pensions Secretary, Liz Kendall MP said:

“Today’s report shows that the broken benefits system is letting down people with mental health conditions who want to work.

“People claiming Health and Disability benefits have been classed by the system as “can’t work” and shut out of jobs and have been ignored – when they’ve been crying out for support.

“That is a serious failure. It’s bad for people, bad for businesses, which miss out on considerable talent, and bad for the economy.”

Whilst the fear of losing benefits if you try work is clearly a failing of the benefits system, the lack of suitable jobs and appropriate support within the workplace seems to have a great deal more to do with employment rights than it does with benefits.

But the main aim purpose of this survey, as far as the government is concerned, is undoubtedly to support whatever changes are proposed when the Green Paper is finally published in the Spring.

You can read more about the Work Aspirations of Health and Disability Claimants survey here.

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  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 2 days ago
    A survey of 3,401 of health and disability benefit customers. How long have we been customers rather than claimants? Do I get a loyal card and money off coupons? I guess the DWP terms them as sanctions...

    Might/could/would work is not the same as can/capable of work. 

    5% of "customers" surveyed felt they could work straight away obviously means 95% feel they cannot. If my maths is correct, that 95% works out in real terms as 3,800,000 "customers".

    (5% of 3,401 surveyed = 170
     95% of 3,401 surveyed = 3,231

    170 becomes 200,000 therefore 3,231 becomes 3,800,000.)

    The DWP is using the answers of 3,401 people to represent the views of 4 million. 3,401 is 0.085% of 4,000,000. For the survey to be statistically valid, it should be at least 5% of 4 million. In other words, 20,000 people minimum needed surveying.

    Now for my own short survey : is Liz Kendall doing a good job? Answers are 1.) NO; 2.) NO; 3.) NO. Please choose wisely. 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 2 days ago
      @WorkshyLayabout You're correct 
      I worked in research for over 20 years.
      There's no way this is representative.
      3,000 respondents plucked at random I'm guessing.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 2 days ago
    They always misinterpret the data to serve thier agenda and this misinterpretation is considered a lie so I do not know how on earth they get away with this deception that may ruins hundreds of thousands of disabled people's lives. The political system is broken and provides a cover for the deciving and curropted politicians to get away with his lies and curroptions. You will never find a politician taken to court for his actions in office but you will find many thousands of carer allowance receipients taken to courts for unintentional mistakes. 

  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 3 days ago
    Looks like they are looking at one health assessment for universal credit health element and pip rolled in one 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 3 days ago
    News alert just seen in papers daily telegraph sir kier starmer axes reform plans for the sick note reform is this a turning point hopefully at last some good news 
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      · 1 days ago
      @Paul What I'm reading I think they are changing the pip system probably putting it into categories because you can work on pip and probably tightening up lcwra group I'm an amputee and have serious rheumatoid arthritis dunno what they gonna only speculation at the moment but I ain't exactly a mountain goat 
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      · 2 days ago
      @Diceman24 Cannot find this in the Telegraph. Link please?
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 3 days ago
    Well if that is true, fabulous, get them a job (good luck finding employers willing to employ them). I suspect that if they are extrapolating the figures from the number who responded their figures are going to be rather skewed. No need to penalise those who are unemployable by cutting their benefits 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 2 days ago
      @Jane @Jane a lot of people haven’t worked for 10+ years that’s a long time to be out of work and some are over 50 too also every job will need an interview 2 references and a work history 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 3 days ago
    Does anyone know if taking away money from people who receive the £400 benefit a month could be challenged legally? I keep wondering if it could be challenged on human rights grounds. If anyone affected chipped in to a Crowdfund to hire someone from The Good Law Project for example, there'd be plenty to pay for a decent legal counsel I'd imagine due to the sheer number of people that would be affected. 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 3 days ago
    PIP Update from the Independent




    " However, these changes to PIP will come instead as part of the government’s previously announced Health Transformation Programme.

    Launched by the previous Conservative administration, the programme intends to simplify the PIP application process. It will also introduce a new single health assessment service for all benefits that require a functional health assessment, with a national rollout planned for 2029.

    Sir Stephen said: “the Health Transformation Programme is modernising health and disability benefit services, to improve people’s experience of applying for PIP. The Programme will transform the entire PIP service, from finding out about benefits through to decisions, eligibility, and payments.”

    “The Programme communicates and engages frequently with disabled people and external stakeholders – including national charities and other organisations that support people with disabilities – about proposed changes. Their opinions and suggestions are taken on board as we test new iterations of the transformed service.”


  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 3 days ago
    I can't take much more of this - the uncertainty of whether I will continue to receive LCWRA, the constant vitriol in the media directed towards people who claim benefits, the government peddling welfare reforms as 'removing barriers to opportunity' when it's clear this is a cost-cutting exercise plain and simple, the hate speech in online comments from the general public about benefit claimants, the MPs proclaiming that my depression and anxiety are not real illnesses and that I am just being lazy / a scrounger / a parasite. And finally the fact that we can complain and protest, but at the end of the the government will do what they want anyway because only those with money and influence have any power. This country is a mess, in fact the whole world is mad right now, and I really have just had enough of everything. 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 2 days ago
      @Jenny You will be ok, if you have bipolar with psychosis. Write down how it affects you, once, and keep handing that to them. Knowing you have it to hand will help you not worry so much. 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 2 days ago
      @Richard I have got Bipolar (with psychosis).  All of this is seriously making me more and more unwell.

      I thought the plans were to make people better and move towards the work place.

      It is most certainly not doing that for me.  I haven't been out of the house since the end of last year that is how unwell it is making me.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 3 days ago
    Just reading all the dwp survey the government can not really force disabled people to work you cannot force anyone let unknown disabled to work. The government will be breaking so many disabled law acts in high courts it’s like saying dwp forcing you to drive a car when physically or mentally you can’t making you and others safty at risk these reforms if dwp do go that road they will be human right courts even b4 they publish it. There’s reform for disabled to work will be voluntary that’s the option the government and dwp HAVE. Thank you for reading my post once again 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 2 days ago
      @Diceman24 They do NOT care about breaking laws.  They will call it something like a "transitional protection" and then picks us up one by one..
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 3 days ago
      @Diceman24 I'm no expert, but I'm thinking along similar lines. These have to be breaches of laws on human rights grounds:  both forcing people to work & taking away their money. What official bodies that work for/with people with disabilities would have the answers to this?
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 3 days ago
    AI  mischief?
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 3 days ago
    I find it shocking they keep on banging on about this as if it is all about catering to the wants of work seeking disabled people. This helping the sick who really want to work narrative is an obvious excuse the gov is trying to drum support on and probably just making this report up. Anyway, how the heck is this going to work when UK job market is already starting to collapse. I've heard there is a big shortage of jobs in Dec 2024 and about to get much worse and they keep pushing this narrative.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 3 days ago
    As some1 who’s is disabled and has special needs and can’t work .  my question is how are 200k ready for work when the survey was done on just over 3k people 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 3 days ago
    At this stage, I just want to know what is going to happen. I've had months of being triggered into fearful responses thinking I'm going to lose £400 a month UC. I am claiming due to CPTSD. I'm in therapy and making process through a 3-stage recovery model. My symptoms mean that I could be easily overwhelmed just by spending more time around people, purely because they could trigger me off into some kind of emotional flashback. If I feel overwhelmed, I can feel suicidal. CPTSD is thought to be a mental health issue but how many people that even have it know that it's actually both a physical AND mental health issue? It's like a brain trauma, my brain is damaged & I have other health issues from it. Will I be thrown on a heap of having a MH issue? Will I be given some more time to get genuine recovery (that doesn't have a predictable date of ending)? I feel genuinely sorry to all involved in this absolute assault on disability & health issues. Solidarity. 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 1 days ago
      @Cee I wish someone would take me through a staged recovery model for ptsd and agoraphobia,I've just had talking therapy so called at level 3 not level 2 and it's been an absolute waste of time,when I contacted mh services again I believed level 3 would be something substantial, or maybe them having the correct knowledge of medication and prescribe what they think you need,try something! but no,all I did was talk,on a phone,they don't even come out to your house for agoraphobia,rhe service is utterly useless for someone in my shoes with a 27 year history of agoraphobia and panic disorder, feel utterly let down!
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 3 days ago
    5%-Thats insignificant as a huge majority still disagree. Talk about political spin. 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 3 days ago
    '5% - approximately 200,000 customers'

    So nearly 4 million DWP 'customers' took this 'the Work Aspirations of Health and Disability Claimants survey...really, I've never heard of it?
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 3 days ago
    Well well well....another 'bogus survey' that none of us participated in,and therefore an 'inaccurate report' !
    Another day, another attack on the sick and disabled. 
    Shameful....just disgraceful. 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 3 days ago
    At the moment it seems as if it is the Treasury pushing for benefits cuts because they want to convince the OBR (an unelected quango that seem to dictate government policy now) that they can reduce spending.

    Kendall, McGovern and Timms are trying to prevent this, wanting to cut the spending by helping more people into work without pressuring people. They are banging on about criminal gangs committing fraud as a way to try an appease the Treasury/OBR. The Treasury are busy briefing against Kendall for "dithering".
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 3 days ago
      @Louise The OBR rules are set by politicians and have been broken several times which means the budget being set in the first place is full of short falls. As the saying goes "Rules are meant to be broken, wise men make them and wiser men break them!"
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 3 days ago
      @Louise Reeves outranks the aforementioned trio you mentioned
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 3 days ago
    The negative attitudes of people who work have towards people on benefits is telling of how awful work is to mind and body. If work was a gentle activity nobody would care.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 3 days ago
    I meant paving the way for what they're concocting.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 3 days ago
    Then, get the right job and support ready and let those who want to work approach the DWP voluntarily, rather than forcing them (in the name of supporting them) and using their benefits against them.

    If these right jobs and support exist, why can't they be given to those who are on jobseekers allowance who are looking for work?

    This so-called survey is all about paving the way for they're concocting.
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