13 October 2009 – New figures show thousands stopped from getting trapped on sickness benefit (ESA/IB) - DWP Press Release
New figures show thousands stopped from getting trapped on sickness benefit
Figures released today (Click here for the figures) show an assessment focussing on what people can do, rather than what they can’t, is stopping more people getting trapped on long-term sickness benefit, a key aim of the Government’s major welfare reform programme.
New figures on the Work Capability Assessment have been released today, alongside new help for people with disabilities or illness to stay in work.
Work and Pensions Secretary Yvette Cooper and Health Secretary Andy Burnham today announced the new Fit For Work scheme which will involve employers, GPs and local councils in helping people with medical conditions or disabilities to work. People who get sick at work will be helped to manage their condition and keep their job rather than claim benefits.
The figures are the first official statistics for the Work Capability Assessment (WCA), the new test, introduced last year, which examines whether someone is fit for work or should go onto Employment and Support Allowance (ESA). The WCA was developed in partnership with doctors and charities which support disabled people.
It assesses people earlier, to make sure they are not stuck on long-term benefits and involves face-to-face assessments rather than assessments on paper.
The test was introduced as part of the Government’s welfare to work reforms in order to increase the accuracy of the assessment and make sure that everyone who is able to work is provided with support to find jobs rather than getting stuck on long-term sickness benefits.
The figures show that of the 193,800 people who made a claim for ESA between October 2008 and February 2009:
- 5 per cent who are the most severely ill or disabled people are going into the support group, and will not be expected to undertake any work related activity, instead being offered voluntary help to manage their condition.
- 36 per cent are found fit for work and not eligible for ESA.
- 11 per cent are found eligible for ESA with work related activity (such as regular advisor interviews) to help them prepare to return to work in the future.
- 38 per cent stopped claiming benefit before the assessment on them was completed.
- 10 per cent were still being assessed as the statistics were compiled.
Under the old Incapacity Benefit (IB) system, an estimated 17 per cent were found fit for work, however as the assessment was carried out after six months rather than three months, more of those with low levels of health problems had already returned to the labour market after only a short term claim.
Work and Pensions Secretary Yvette Cooper said:
"In the 80s and early 90s, including the recession, the number of people claiming Incapacity Benefit rose by a million. And too many people ended up on long term sickness benefit without help to get back to work. That must never happen again. Those who can work need help to get back into jobs as soon as possible, so they don't get trapped on long-term benefits. That's why we've introduced this stronger early medical assessment alongside more support in work."
The Fit for Work pilots will give people who fall ill whilst at work the help they need to manage their condition and stay in their job rather than end up on benefits.
Secretary of State for Health Andy Burnham said:
"We have a moral and economic obligation to help people who have suffered ill health to get back to work as soon as possible. Unemployment and lost working days caused by ill health costs the economy £100 billion a year and we know that being in work can be good for your wellbeing. Our Fit for Work schemes will test new, innovative and personalised services to help people back into work. We want these pilots to have a real impact and show us what works best so we can build on this investment in the future."
The fit for work programme will run in addition to the access to work budget which helps those with medical conditions or disabilities who have extra costs in order to work (such as extra travel costs or specialist equipment).
Ministers have also said that the roll out of the new assessment meant it was time to look at ways to improve and adapt the Pathways programme to ensure that people looking for work and ESA claimants with health problems, get more effective help to get into work and manage their condition. Further details will be set out in the back to work White Paper.
Notes to Editors:
- The WCA statistics are available at http://research.dwp.gov.uk/asd/workingage/esa_wca.asp
- The Fit for Work Service is a result of recommendations made by Dame Carol Black in her review of the health of Britain’s working age population published in 2008. £13 million of central Government funds has been committed to fund the service, which is being piloted in:
- Rhyl
- Scotland
- Leicestershire
- Nottinghamshire
- Birmingham
- North Staffordshire
- East & Coastal Kent
- Kensington & Chelsea
- Dundee
- Wakefield
- The Fit For Work Service pilots will:
- give people who become ill the help they need to manage their condition and stay in work, so that they do not end up on benefits.
- bring together support such healthcare, employment, skills, housing and debt advice.
- test a variety of models to give the pilots the best chance of demonstrating the efficacy of early intervention.
- encourage local partnerships to pool existing funds and develop new and innovative services to deliver a Fit for Work Service for people in their area with health problems, who are in work but are in danger of falling out of work.
- Employment Support Allowance:
- In October 2008, we introduced work-focused Employment and Support Allowance (ESA) for new customers.
- Alongside ESA we introduced a new more robust medical assessment - the Work Capability Assessment - as part of our assessment of entitlement.
- ESA is tailor made for disabled people and people with ill-health and is part of the Government’s radical welfare reform programme, which aims to get 1 million people off incapacity benefits by 2015.
- The Welfare Reform Act 2007 announced that ESA was to be introduced for new customers only. However there was no time scale for transferring existing incapacity benefit customers to ESA.
- The Welfare Reform White Paper published last December set out our intention to transfer all existing incapacity benefits customers to ESA between 2010 and 2013.
ESA Weekly rates:
A single person in the Support Group - £95.15 or up to £108.55 (if on ESA (IR) )
A single person in the Work Related Activity Group - up to £89.80
A single person aged 25 and over during assessment phase - up to £64.30
Those in the Work-related Activity Group can be subject to sanctions (up to the value of the work-related activity component - £24.00) if the customer does not engage in the conditionality requirements without good reason.
Media Enquiries: 0203 267 5126
Out of hours: 07659 108 883
Website: www.dwp.gov.uk
Two-thirds applying for new sickness benefit are refused claims
• Unemployed face end of benefits or lower weekly payouts under stricter medical test
• Only 5% claiming employment and support allowance now get full £108.55
- Patrick Wintour, political editor
- guardian.co.uk, Tuesday 13 October 2009 22.30 BST
More than two-thirds of applicants for a new sickness-related benefit are failing in their claims, suggesting many of the 2.6 million existing incapacity benefit claimants will be forced on to a lower level of benefit when they are assessed over the next two to three years.
The findings come in research published today by the Department for Work and Pensions into the impact of a tougher medical assessment for the employment and support allowance (ESA), introduced in October. Of claimants for this allowance, 36% have been stated to be capable of working – a figure more than double that of those subjected to the old medical test.
The findings, covering nearly 200,000 claims, suggest the government can make big savings from a tougher approach to welfare, despite growing unemployment. Jobless figures are expected to top 2.5 million, while the figure among those aged 18-24 could surpass one million.
Overall, the research found only 5% of those seeking ESA were thought totally incapable of being ready for work and so entitled to the full benefit of £108.55. A further 11%, thought potentially capable of work, were put on a rate of £89.80 a week, and were expected to co-operate with efforts to ready themselves for work. A third of the initial claimants dropped out before completing the claim, and a further third were seen as fit for work.
The new assessment, the work capability assessment, focuses on the work claimants could do rather than that which they can not. The research suggests that substantial government savings could be available when, between 2010 and 2013, the existing 2.6 million people on incapacity benefit are tested using the tougher assessment.
On this basis the number of sickness-related benefit claimants likely to be rejected in a year will top 250,000.
The figures announced today represent the fullest official survey of the impact of the medical assessment. The survey looked at 193,800 applications, covering October 2008 to February 2009.
The work and pensions secretary, Yvette Cooper, did not pass judgment on the findings. She said: "In the 80s and early 90s, the number of people claiming incapacity benefit rose by a million. Too many people ended up on long-term sickness benefit without help to get back to work. That must never happen again."


More claimants 'fit to work' under new sickness benefit regime
Liberal Democrats accuse government of 'shunting' more disabled people onto lower levels of support Posted: 13 October 2009 |
writes Jeremy Dunning
More people are being deemed ineligible for sickness benefits and fit to work under the new system introduced last year by the government, according to figures released today.
The Department for Work and Pensions statistics showed that over twice the proportion of applicants for employment and support allowance (ESA) were being assessed as fit to work than under ESA's predecessor, incapacity benefit.
This means they are being put on to jobseeker's allowance which at £64.30 a week is worth £25 a week less than ESA and involves less support.
Lib Dems warn of benefit shunting
The government claimed the figures showed thousands of people were being prevented from being trapped on long-term sickness benefits, however, the Liberal Democrats accused ministers of "shunting" disabled people on to lower levels of support.
Under reforms introduced last year, new sickness benefits claimants have been subject to a work capability assessment (WCA), replacing the personal capability assessment test for incapacity benefit, and designed to determine how able people are to work.
Benefit cuts warnings
The WCA assesses people three months after a claim, rather than six, as previously, and involves face-to-face assessments rather than assessments on paper, but has proved controversial with disability groups who see it as a way of cutting the benefits bill.
Today's figures show that of the 193,800 people who made a claim for ESA between October 2008 and February 2009, 36% were found to be fit for work, compared with 17% of previous incapacity benefit claimants.
The Department for Work and Pensions said part of the explanation for the difference was that IB claimants were assessed six months after their claim, meaning those with lower-level health problems may have returned to work in the meantime.
5% deemed unfit to work
The figures also showed:-
'May disguise problem'
In response, Lib Dem shadow work and pensions secretary Steve Webb said: "“The government is shunting large numbers of ill or disabled people onto a lower level of support by deeming them ‘fit to work’. This scheme may simply disguise the problem instead of dealing with it."
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He urged the government to track those deemed ineligible for ESA to ensure "they are not left to rot on a benefit with a different name".
However, work and pensions secretary Yvette Cooper said: "Those who can work need help to get back into jobs as soon as possible, so they don't get trapped on long-term benefits. That's why we've introduced this stronger early medical assessment alongside more support in work."
Autism concerns
The figures came on the day that the National Autistic Society released a report warning that autistic adults were being failed by the benefits system, and that their particular needs were not being picked up by the assessment, leaving them ineligible for ESA.
The figures were released alongside the launch of the government's 10 Fit For Work pilots which will involve employers, GPs and councils in helping people with medical conditions or disabilities stay in work.
From Communitycare.co.uk