Figures released by DWP disability minister Stephen Timms show that claimants who have a face-to-face work capability assessment (WCA) are least likely to be considered to have limited capability for work-related activity (LCWRA) by the assessor.

The figures for 2024 demonstrate that telephone WCAs are still by far the most common, something that has been the case ever since the covid pandemic.

  • 495,500  (69%) of WCAs are telephone.   
  • 89,900  (13%) of WCAs are paper.    
  • 73,600  (10%) of WCAs are face-to-face. 
  • 56,400  (8%) of WCAs are video.    

It is notable that video assessments are now almost as numerous as face-to-face assessments and may well overtake them before long.

In terms of outcomes, paper-based assessments have by far the highest proportion of LCWRA recommendations at 99%.  However, only those most clearly and severely impacted by their condition will have paper-based assessment.

At the other end of the scale, face-to-face assessments end in just over half, 53% of claimants being assessed as having LCWRA.  This compares to 63% for video assessments and 61% for telephone assessments.

Type

LCWRA

LCW

FFW

Telephone 

61%

21%

18%

Paper 

99%

1%

0%

Face-to-face 

53%

21%

25%

Video 

63%

18%

20%

It may not be the case that face-to-face assessments are harsher in themselves. Instead, it may be that the types of condition that the DWP select for a face-to-face assessment are the less severe ones.

And it should also be noted that it is a decision maker, rather than the assessor who makes the final decision on what group a claimant is put in.  Though in the vast majority of cases the decision maker accepts the assessor’s recommendation.

Nonetheless, the statistics are worth bearing in mind if you are considering asking the DWP to change your assessment type as a reasonable adjustment.

You can read the full statement from Stephen Timms here.

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  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
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    · 2 days ago
    "Liz Kendall says getting people into work is best way to cut benefits bill."

    Unless it's voluntary, It'll not work.

    Forcing people will not get them into work but into poverty, as they would be prone  to sanctions which would make them lose the miserable benefits they're currently receiving.

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    · 3 days ago
    labour are very good at opposing welfare cuts. Until they are in government
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 2 days ago
      @aunt dossy @ aunt dossy 👆 this comment right here, says it all. Bang on the money.

      Does nobody ever learn. STOP voting Labour.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 2 days ago
      @aunt dossy I cannot remember the last time they opposed cuts, and their record in government is horrific.  I honestly cannot understand what was making people think Labour were not capable of doing this before the election.
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      · 2 days ago
      @aunt dossy Except Liz Kendall, as she has always been a fierce proponent for welfare cuts. In 2015, she and Harriet Harman were the only two from Labour who voted for the Tory welfare cuts and child benefit cap.
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      · 2 days ago
      @aunt dossy They are also good at going into wars and spending on arms which all of a sudden there is a lot of money available for. We have been here whenever there is stagflation! 
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    · 3 days ago
    As someone who went to the Falklands and came back disabled, it seems that all Governments hit those with little political power as an easy hit. More especially the labour government OAPs lost the heating allowance and yet Ministers of State claim their!! Why is the  PLP silent on cuts to the disabled?? The stage is being set in the media.....
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    · 3 days ago
    "The Department for Work and Pensions will today announce that 1,000 work coaches will be deployed to deliver intensive employment support to sick and disabled people."

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      · 2 days ago
      @asmith25 Well good luck, you sound like one of the 200k they are talking about. As for me, I can't and won't go back into that world that helped to bring me to two breakdowns and almost my life. 
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      · 2 days ago
      @MJ I'm mentally disabled and I want to work but I need the support to do so, I need a daily routine. We are not all the same, the disabled and sick aren't a homogenous group at all. I think where the government needs to be very careful is distinguishing between the people who can't work at all and those who could and want to work part time or full time and depending on distance to travel too. Trying to avoid burnout too. Generally we try to tell people our wants and needs and to be honest after my PIP tribunal, it would've been nice to voluntarily met someone from the DWP at some point months later and discuss options or my goals in a non-consequential manner. The whole system is too compartmentalised and inflexible. As someone who went to university, got my degree because I had the appropriate support, the barriers to work I've had are bloody frustrating. I'm wary of Starmer's Labour but I hope they can break down at least some of these barriers, as my disability just shouldn't be a barrier to my potential.
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      · 2 days ago
      @C Where does it say "VOULUNTARY"?
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      · 2 days ago
      @Scorpion Ha, ha, even better. Nowhere near enough resources, ages spent training nowhere near enough people to do what they say they're trying to achieve, no time soon.
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      · 2 days ago
      @rtbcpart2 And guess what - many of these work coaches have just started an apprenticeship to become a work coach, like the one Liz Kendall has met today while visiting a jobcentre in Tower Hamlets, east London.
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    · 3 days ago
    When the Conservatives proposed changes to wca, including abolishing lcwra, they were going to make getting pip a condition for qualifying for a health element in uc, hence the recent rush of new  pip claimants. Now the government needs to cut spending on pip. Whoever could have predicted that?
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 3 days ago
      @robbie Todays Times says the majority of the £5bn saving are coming from PIP.
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    · 4 days ago
    I've read the news speculation on Rachel Reeves' future cuts, I'll say this yes Labour will cuddle up to Reform and the Tories on this but they'll lose so much support. There will be a major backlash over this.

    I can't mention another bill going through Parliament but it's from Kim Leadbeater, one can't help but feel they want the "Canadian solution" to Disabled people and that is something people have to start recognising, I don't believe in coincidence. 
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      · 1 days ago
      @rookie I thought I would answer this. In Canada provincial governments have their own disability programmes but from 2025 the federal government will be paying an extra 200 dollars a month for disabilities. Nothing has changed at the provincial levels. Hope this helps
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      · 3 days ago
      @Dave Dee There won't be any backlash. There has always been a strong public support for benefit cuts and, due to this fact, benefit claimants have always been treated as political punching bags.
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      · 3 days ago
      @Dave Dee What's the "Canadian solution"?
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 3 days ago
      @bert until of course their human frailty catches up with them and they fall ill and disabled! 
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      · 3 days ago
      @Dave Dee Their wont be a backlash over the cuts because most able people will be in agreement with the government 
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