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UK Social Security and Child Support Commissioners' Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> UK Social Security and Child Support Commissioners' Decisions >> [2003] UKSSCSC CIB_399_2003 (18 September 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKSSCSC/2003/CIB_399_2003.html Cite as: [2003] UKSSCSC CIB_399_2003 |
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[2003] UKSSCSC CIB_399_2003 (18 September 2003)
DECISION OF THE SOCIAL SECURITY COMMISSIONER
"[The claimant] tells me that he suffers from severe asthma and as a result of this he is incapable of work. He explained to me that he has 3-4 asthma attacks per day which take a long period of time to recover from. He also informs me that when he carries out the lightest of duties, it results in him getting very breathless, wheezing and bringing on dizzy spells. [The claimant] also tells me that he has very restless nights because of his asthma which leaves him very tired the following day."
"The claim made by and on behalf of [the claimant] is outweighed by the findings of the Examining Medical Practitioner. The report is preferred because it is expert and objective and contains clinical findings to support its conclusions. It is a detailed report which is based on discussion with, observation and clinical examination of [the claimant] and which focuses on the criteria for Incapacity Benefit. It is also consistent with the Tribunal's own (albeit limited) observations of [the claimant] during the hearing referred to above [that he did not cough during the hearing], and does not accord with [the claimant's] self-assessment in his IB50 of 74 points."
The statement went on to accept that the claimant had some difficulties and awarded three points each for sometimes not being able to rise from sitting and sometimes not being able to bend or kneel. It also accepted, on the basis of what the claimant had said about walking to the tribunal venue from the station that he could not walk more than 400 metres without stopping or severe discomfort (three points). It accepted that he had problems with stairs, but because of the aggregation rule nothing was added to the three points for walking. It concluded that the exertion of lifting and carrying would not cause excessive stress, so that no points were justified. The total of nine points was below the necessary 15.
"15. A person who at the commencement of any day is, or thereafter becomes, incapable of work by reason of some specific disease or bodily or mental disablement shall be treated as incapable of work throughout that day."
"22. Although the claimant's capacity for work is determined at a particular time on a particular day, in determining whether the claimant is or is not incapable of work at any particular time on any particular day, it is not possible to confine consideration solely to that time on that day. The reason lies in the proper use of language. In determining whether a person `cannot' perform a particular activity, it is appropriate to take into account how long the inability is likely to continue, whether it is likely to recur and, if so, at what intervals.
For example: if a claimant at 2 o'clock in the afternoon on 1st April suffers an acute prolapsed intervertebral disc and becomes bedridden as a result, it could be said as a proper use of language that at the time the claimant `cannot' perform a whole range of activities in the physical disabilities section of the all work test, the scores from which would be sufficient to satisfy that test, making the claimant incapable of work. The reason is that the claimant's incapacity is an ongoing one.However, if a claimant is unable to perform an activity at one moment, but may be able to do so in the next moment, it is not necessarily a proper use of language to say in the context of the all work test that the activity `cannot' be performed.
For example: in order to apply the all work test to a claimant who is disabled by low back pain that varies from time to time and from day to day, it is necessary to take a broader picture of the claimant than the disability on that day at that time.
That this is correct is underlined by the existence of some descriptors that apply where a disability is experienced `sometimes': see descriptors 5(c) and 6(c), which relate to rising from sitting and bending and kneeling. If the test could be applied at a particular moment and no consideration need be given to the claimant's capabilities at any time other than that moment, the claimant would always satisfy the `cannot' descriptors and these `sometimes' descriptors would never apply.
23. So far as tribunals are concerned, regulation 15 will apply where there is a sudden onset of or recovery from an incapacitating condition, including an intermittent incapacitating condition or the incapacitating intermittent features of a condition. It does not operate to ensure that a claimant with a variable condition that incapacitates him for a part of each day must be considered as incapacitated throughout the whole of every day."
"This means that if the claimant suffers an asthma attack which does not last the whole day, he is still to be treated as incapable of work during that day, provided, of course, that the effect of the attack is that he would score 15 or more points using the descriptors for more than a minimal period."
(Signed) J Mesher
Commissioner
Date: 18 September 2003