The DWP have revealed the draft criteria they will be using to select claimants for the Severe Disability Group, which will allow fast-track claims for disability benefits.  Benefits and Work would like to know if readers with severe, lifelong conditions think they would meet the criteria.

What is the Severe Disability Group?

The purpose of the Severe Disability Group is to improve the disability benefits assessment process for claimants who have conditions which are severely disabling, lifelong and with no realistic prospect of recovery.

Claimants who fit the criteria will not need to complete a detailed application form or go through a face-to-face assessment in order to claim personal independence payment (PIP) or to be found to have limited capability for work-related activity (LCWRA) for employment and support allowance (ESA0 or universal credit (UC).

The introduction of a Severe Disability Group was first consulted on in the Health and Disability green paper in 2021.

The resulting Health and Disability white paper published in 2023 revealed that design and testing of the Severe Disability Group had already begun.

The DWP have now announced that they are widening the testing of the Severe Disability Group, with two separate tests taking place, both relating to PIP.  There is more on this below.

How the Severe Disability Group works

Where a claimant is considered likely to meet the criteria for the Severe Disability Group, a short form will be sent to their specialist clinician.  The form is similar to the SR1/DS1500 form used for claimants who are terminally ill.

You can download a copy of the SR1 form from the response to this freedom of information request.

If the specialist confirms that the claimant meets the criteria, they will not be required to attend an assessment and will no longer be required to fill in complex forms, such as the PIP ‘How your disability affects you’ form or the ESA50/UC50.

Testing the criteria

The DWP are currently running two tests of the draft Severe Disability Group criteria

One test involves asking a selected group of clinicians to identify patients they believe are suitable.

The other test involves the DWP contacting claimants they consider to be likely to meet the criteria and asking if they would be willing to take part.  If they are, the DWP will then contact their clinician and ask them to complete a brief form. 

The DWP have said that participation is entirely voluntary, claimants can withdraw at any time and they “will not be financially disadvantaged by taking part.”

Official criteria

In order to meet the Severe Disability Group criteria, the DWP say claimants must :

have an irreversible or progressive condition, confirmed or managed by a secondary care specialist, with no realistic prospect of improvement 

have had no significant response to treatment, or treatment will not improve function, or no further treatment is planned

have a severe impairment of physical or mental function (or likely to develop this within 6 months) such that they need assistance from another person to complete two or more activities of daily living

The Secretary of State is satisfied that, for the individual patient the criteria have been fulfilled for: 
enhanced Personal Independence Payment (PIP) daily living or mobility components
functional limited capacity for work-related activity (LCWRA) or support group

Our interpretation

There is no published official guidance on how to interpret these criteria. So, please be aware that the definitions below are our understanding of the criteria, they are not official definitions.

An irreversible condition is one that may not deteriorate further but will also not improve, such as a learning disability, ADHD, spinal cord injury or cerebral palsy.

A progressive condition is one that is known to deteriorate, such as osteoarthritis, Parkinson’s disease, COPD or Alzheimer’s disease.  

A secondary care specialist is someone who is not in the first line of treatment.  So, a GP or mental health nurse would not be included, but a cardiologist or a psychiatrist would be.  It appears that you don’t need to be currently seeing a specialist, but you need to at least have had your condition confirmed by a specialist.

There is no planned treatment that will improve your condition further.

Your condition needs to affect two or more activities of daily living to the extent that you need assistance from another person.  These activities aren’t defined, but the list of PIP daily living activities would seem to be a likely place to start.

For PIP, you need to be able to meet the threshold for an enhanced award of the PIP daily living or mobility component.  If you don’t already get an award, you can check the criteria using the Benefits and Work PIP test.

For UC or ESA, you need to meet the criteria for being in the LCWRA group or the support group.  If you don’t currently get either of these benefits you can our UC WCA test for LCWRA or use our ESA test for the support group.

Would you qualify?

The DWP say they worked with specialist health professionals to develop the criteria and also consulted with several charities.

But, as always, they don’t seem to have talked to any of the claimants who will be on the receiving end of this system.

So, we’d like to hear your opinions and queries about the criteria in the comments section below. 

And, if you currently get at least one component of PIP at the enhanced rate or you are in the LCWRA group for UC or the support group for ESA, do you think you would meet these criteria and be eligible for the Severe Disability Group?  Or is there something about your condition, your contact with health professionals or something else that you think would threaten your chances?

You can read the full Severe Disability Group test: information for clinicians  Please note: considerably more details about the Severe Disability Group criteria were added to the DWP web page on 27 February.

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  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 9 months ago
    My post got cut. Trying again. 

    This new measure looks like a ploy for the dwp to bump existing claimants off PIP and LCWRA/Support rather than a fast track route to qualifying.. Unless GPs are savvy with dwp double speak they might not confirm the necessary criteria, especially with assessment of 'how your disability affects you' regarding 'daily living'', so existing claimants could have their awards reduced or stopped.

    It has long been dwp policy not to base awards solely on condition diagnosis, but on detailed assessment of the effect of conditions on the individual. Suddenly they're asking the GP to assess that without experience of how the 'how your disability affects you' criteria work.

    The severe conditions criteria can already be applied to existing claimants with higher/support group awards where there is no prospect of improvement. Referring cases to the GP, who is unlikely to have time to research the intricacies of the disability benefits points system, could be detrimental to claimants. Patients rarely have sufficient continuity of care with a GP these days for a GP to understand what their day to day lives are like.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 9 months ago
    We are just a form of entertainment for the super rich. 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 9 months ago
    Question... Those who repeatedly get kept in SG over many years, because its obvious to 'someone' they fit the criteria ,and have no changes for the better each time they get a review,why are they not going to be put into this new group? (Should it become a reality) automatically. 


    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 9 months ago
      @T @T My thoughts exactly. We aren't in support group for fun and games. 
      I honestly think the dwp talk rings around themselves..  Absolutely illogical.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 9 months ago
      @The Dog mother 'have a severe impairment of physical or mental function (or likely to develop this within 6 months) such that they need assistance from another person to complete two or more activities of daily living'.….....   
               From this rule surely most of us should have to get this new award automatically without any need for specialist to fill in unnecessary forms ???     They claim to be the experts after all don't they the assessors and dwp decision makers, they have all the information needed when awarding us our ESA/PIP..   
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 9 months ago
    Thought at first it was a new assessment for all disabled claimants.
    Then I read claimants must be under 65.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 9 months ago
    Clearly this is the group who will be exempt from work commitments when the work capability assessment is abolished (if it will depend on who is in power)... The rest of us will be at the mercy of the wonderful work coaches in the job centre, doesn't life just keep getting better hey!!   The thing is we all deserve to be left alone and recover.   It's not fair because we will then all see and know of a claimant who has a certain condition and they tick the boxes for this idea, however they might live life and get by so much more easier than a person who doesn't meet the criteria for this new group but will actually need and should be in this group just as much as the rest, it's cruel and discriminates... It's going to cause so much upset, distress anger and resentment. 
    It's good for the ones who will make this group and I'm not saying you won't deserve it because you will deserve it but I can't hide my anger that the rest of us will be left probably to suffer more than we ever have in the clutches of the DWP and the jobcentre work coaches enjoying making like more miserable for the others who will never recover but we don't meet a certain tick in a discrimination box...  When will it ever be my turn to have a bit of peace and stress free time from constant dwp stuff.  Sorry guys I'm going on but I'm just feel sorry for myself today, I was up all night worrying about new articles recently, now convinced they will select me to try and do over. 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 8 months ago
      @lesley-anne Hello Lesley. At the age of 76, you can apply for attendance allowance, if your disability has worsened you could be better off as current rates are 
      “Attendance Allowance is paid weekly at 2 different rates – the one you get depends on the level of help you need:
      £68.10 per week if you need help in the day or the night
      £101.75 per week if you need help both in the day and at night
      Additional benefit entitlement: You could get extra Pension Credit, Housing Benefit or Council Tax Reduction if you get Attendance Allowance.

      please contact Age UK for benefit advice.

      Ask you Local authority for a “full needs assessment” they have a duty of care. 

      I hope you can get sorted  with the help you need asap and not worry about DWP potentially changing anything. 



    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 9 months ago
      @T
      Am 76 and still spend sleepless nights worrying about what they have next on their agenda. I am a pensioner, a widow and never had a works pension.  Spent much of my married life caring for a severly disabled man, so never had a works pension.  I have some state pension but it's topped up with pension credit and DLA.  I am now physically disabled myself and only get low care DLA with the middle care rate.  No chance of even getting more for physical disabilities. Am too old.  So I rely completely on benefits. Feel like my life is not my own sometimes.  The worry and anxiety of what might happen is really frightening.  Local adult social care is non existent.  Recently tried to get some help but it never materialised.  I had to call 111 and they were very helpful.  Then my GP got the Rapid Access service out to me who were also very helpful.  I did get a community physiotherapist around once to help me to go outside for a walk.  I was told to try Age Uk for some voluntary help.  So it goes on, one just goes round and round ending up where you started from.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 9 months ago
      @T I want no one to go through any more of this soul destroying bunkum.
      I'm fed up at the constant barrage of form filling and explaining my life away.
      It's easy for those who are a world away from what we have to contend with in our health concerns and with dwp to sit in judgement and plan our lives out before us. 
      Playing God if you will with our very existence. 
      I fully get that there must be some form of criteria set out to 'prove' who really is unwell, but the fact its all set up to confuse and reject our claims means you are more or less fighting a losing battle.
      Nothing is fair or set out in a way  to help us. If they keep on changing things and punishing those who would in the past got in to support group or had a pip award then where does it end.
      Who really will get any help in the long run.
      Throw those of us by the wayside who don't fit into their agenda, but we are still who we were before any change and still need as much help, nothing really changes only the numbers they can say have decreased on disability benefits and few will question it. I'm disgusted ,disheartened and worn done.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 9 months ago
    They have only recently decided that even a diagnosis of a severe mental illness will no longer qualify you for LCWRA unless you are in 'active psychosis' whatever they deem that to mean. So presumably they don't plan to included people with SMI in this new group  despite many of us having had lifelong disabilities and have exhausted all available NHS treatment options. So - business as usual for us I assume?
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 8 months ago
      @Al I’m not sure that is accurate. The substantial risk route is being removed but you can still get the needed points through the descriptors, I assume.
      I think removing the substantial risk clause is disgraceful. They are doing it because it is how most people get into the support group. What will happen is people will become psychotic because of the stress and this will create more need for hospital admits and a less safe society. Hospital beds have gone down from150,000 to 20,000. Where has that money gone to? I think that there should be a legal way to have a disclaimer properly drafted and presented to the DWP and local mp etc, stating that we are not responsible for what happens if we become ill due to the stress involved, thereby becoming a substantial risk to ourselves and others. The police, courts, probation, society is quick to call us non compliant and responsible for what we do when ill.Jeremy Hunt…never trust a man that dies his hair….dripping with vanity.  He stares like a power addicted psychopath these days. Creepy.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 9 months ago
    That sounds like nonsense. 
    Many of us with lifelong or decades long illnesses or disability don't see consultants-specialists  as we've been there and done that numerous times. 
    Also,how many would be willing or indeed have the time to write the patient a letter stating they fit any criteria.
    So, debilitating illness that someone suffers from daily won't be considered. Because it's not progressive, you would not qualify,even though you have it day and daily and severe?
    I get it that those with very notable diseases should definitely qualify as usual so many will fall through the cracks. 
    It's anyone's guess who'd qualify.
    Regardless of being in support group as they are trying to get as many of us off SP as possible. 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 8 months ago
      @MrFibro What about if I have LCWRA from 2019 and PIP (both standard ) because of cancer - CML , everyday chemo tablets for whole my life, causing severe pain in my joints, bones etc ? Should I qualify? 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 9 months ago
      @The Dog mother Good points raised ..the dog mother,

      Just wondering how LABOUR see this, and if they would also approve with this so-called new proposal of ......What is the Severe Disability Group.

      No way this is to help claimants fast rack at all.  The devils in the detail, and that's to kick claimants of or lower their benefits.  These hateful people who dream this lot up in their think tanks, & also the implementers,  I hope they all succumb to severe crippling illnesses.  But sods law nothing befalls these devils.

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