The DWP very quietly published a series of damning disability benefits related reports at 4pm on Friday 2 May, on the eve of a bank holiday and on a day when the news was dominated by the results of the local elections held the day before. 

Had it not been for the ever vigilant staff at Rightsnet spotting them, the documents would have undoubtedly sunk without trace.

The reports show, amongst other things that:

  • additional work coach support makes almost no difference to disabled claimants employment prospects, in spite of being one of the main tools for getting people into work as set out in the Pathways To Work Green Paper;
  • Employment and Health Discussions also make almost no difference to disabled claimants, in spite of being another of the pillars of the Pathways To Work Green Paper employment drive;
  • few claimants find out about PIP from the media or social media, undermining the claim that “sickfluencers” are at the heart of a rise in PIP claims.

Additional work coach support

In a report entitled “The Experience of Additional Work Coach Support”, researchers carried out in-depth interviews with claimants on the “universal credit health journey” who had been given extra appointments with a work coach.

The experience was a positive one for many claimants,: “Many customers saw improvements to mental health and wellbeing because of the consistent, empathetic support they received from their work coach.”

Ironically, one of the ways work coaches improved their customers lives was by “helping with claims for Personal Independence Payment

However, the report found that “Feeling meaningfully closer to work was an outcome for only a minority of those interviewed.”

The researchers found that claimants with limited capability for work-related activity “were less likely to report an improvement in their work motivation and confidence following support from a work coach. This was mainly because their health condition(s) continued to be their over-riding concern.”

Work coach intervention had no effect where physical health was concerned:  “While support from a work coach often improved mental wellbeing, there was little change in the customers’ ability to manage physical health conditions. For those who saw their physical health as a barrier to work, this generally remained the case despite work coach support.”

Given that 72% of claimants facing the loss of their PIP under the Green Paper cuts have physical health conditions, this suggests there is little chance that increased support from the DWP would make any difference to their employment outlook.

Paragraph 228 of the Pathways To Work Green Paper boasts that additional work coach support raised the employment rate of LCWRA claimants from 8% to 11%.

There are two issues with this. 

Firstly, it is a very small increase:  if 1.3 million claimants lose their PIP daily living component, then a 3% improvement in employment rates would see just 39,000 of these claimants find work.

Secondly, the Green Paper made no reference to the fact that additional work coach support only appears to have any positive effect at all for claimants with mental health issues, whilst the overwhelming majority of threatened PIP claimants have back problems, arthritis, other musculoskeletal problems, respiratory disease and heart disease.

Employment and Health discussion

The Employment and Health Discussion (EHD) involves a conversation between a UC claimant with a health condition and a healthcare professional.

The purpose of the conversation is to identify the range of barriers affecting the claimant’s ability to work, identify solutions and put them together in a Workability Action Plan that the claimant can use to move towards work.

A report evaluating the EHD was one of those quietly slipped out by the DWP before the bank holiday weekend.

The report found that when surveyed immediately after completing the EHD, around half of claimants(48%) reported feeling more positively about work and (57%) reported that they were more likely to take up support offers such as training or volunteering. Smaller proportions reported feeling more confident about getting into work (40%) and that work was more important to them (35%).

However, according to the report, these feelings were not sustained:  “When a small sample were surveyed 6 weeks after completing the EHD, few reported continued improvements to their workability scores after the EHD, even when they had taken the suggested steps in their Workability Action Plan.”

The report went on to say that “in practice it appears solutions are not always best matched to obstacles in Workability Action Plans. Similarly, the full range of barriers within the biopsychosocial model may be underexplored in some cases.”

In layman’s terms then, EHD’s make claimant’s briefly feel more positive but the solutions they produce don’t work and fail to address may of the barriers to work that disabled claimants actually face.

Yet paragraphs 217 to 223 of the Pathways To Work Green Paper are devoted to the introduction of “a new support conversation” which will “enable people to get help early, providing access to more rapid and timely support.”

Except that, according to their own research, the support conversation won’t have any lasting effects at all.

Triggers to claiming PIP

In another buried report, “Triggers to claiming Personal Independence Payment” researchers found that: “People were recently made aware of PIP through contact with formal services (including Jobcentre Plus) friends and family. Few participants mentioned media or social media.”

The report was commissioned after a rise in PIP claims that took place in October 2021 and so may be out of date, but it does raise the question as to why the DWP have waited until now to publish it.

More importantly, it means that the DWP have no evidence to support the claim that young people are being introduced to the idea of claiming PIP by YouTube and TikTok “sickfluencers”. 

In fact, the only actual evidence they can produce about what prompts people to claim PIP says exactly the opposite.

The buried reports in full

When he became disability minister, Stephen Timms claimed that he would create a new era of transparency at the DWP, as part of an effort to restore trust in the DWP.

Yet his department deliberately buried reports that cast enormous doubt on the two main tools to be used to move claimants, who have had their benefits cut or stopped, into work.

They kept this evidence from MPs just weeks before they are due to vote on the Green Paper.

Perhaps you could share news of the reports with your MP, given that Mr Timms is so reluctant to do so? 

You can download all the DWP’s research reports from this page.

The reports that were all published on the eve of the bank holiday are:

Applicants’ Journeys to Claiming PIP: Research

Additional Support Needs in the Personal Independence Payment Claim Journey

The experience of Additional Work Coach Support: Findings from qualitative interviews with customers

Triggers to claiming Personal Independence Payment

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  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 14 hours ago
    Can recommend you guys too subscribe to the relevant GOV.UK RSS feeds to get these reports (and press releases, policy documents, everything) as they’re published. Your own website uses RSS, so you should be able to get information how to do this if you’re unsure 
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    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 3 hours ago
      @keepingitreal It is indeed terrible timing. And grotesque that a recent report highlighted the massive financial savings that will be made in the NHS bill if Assisted Dying is passed. 
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    · 20 hours ago
    Great work all round.  Thanks.  
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    · 21 hours ago
    The self destruct button has been pressed once again by the Dwp.
    Share this info far and wide folks, we need all hands on deck. 
    Priceless. 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 22 hours ago
    Email to my MP:

    Dear Anna,

    I would like to highlight to you some research reports that Labour released at 4pm on Friday 2nd May, just before the bank holiday and just as the local elections were dominating news: seemingly a good, quiet day to slip the research results under the radar.

    Did they time the release in this way because the results of the research wholly undermine their proposed measures in the Pathways to Work green paper?

    These reports, detailed on the Benefitsandwork news page (link at end of email), show that:

    1) more intensive work coach support improves some claimants’ mental health, but does not help them get into work. (Ref research report entitled “The Experience of Additional Work Coach Support”)

    The largest cohort of claimants who face loss of PIP under the proposals (72%) claim for physical health challenges rather than mental health ones.

    2) Employment and Health Discussions also make a negligible impact on getting disabled claimants getting into work

    3) Triggers to claiming PIP are usually through contact with formal services rather than media or social media (‘sickfluencers’) (Ref report entitled “Triggers to claiming Personal Independence Payment”

    The green paper proposals will fail to get disabled people into work.

    People will lose their income, their carers and suffer poverty and deprivation.

    The proposed 4 point rule will exclude thousands of very sick and disabled claimants from financial support, including those with MS and cancer.

    Health, social care services and local authorities will suffer massive additional financial pressures.

    These proposals will cost far more than they will save, both financially and in ruined and lost lives.

    https://www.benefitsandwork.co.uk/news/dwp-buried-damning-reports-showing-work-coaches-unable-to-help-disabled-claimants

    Yours sincerely,
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 22 hours ago
    The mainstream media won't dare publish this article, instead they'll just keep posting their daily benefits-bashing propaganda about how all of us on disability benefit are bone-idle and living the life of luxury. It's shameful how hard many mainstream news outlets (and the DWP) try to hide the truth and force feed us lies. 
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    · 23 hours ago
    Excellent article, more and more damning evidence against the dwp/government's plans are building up every single day..
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    · 23 hours ago
    Glad this was spotted and thanks for letting us know. I am set to have a phone interview with regards claimant commitment and wanting work. With less than 9 months to my official retirement I doubt very much I will be able to cure myself of the effects of diabetes much less be able to grow a new heart! I really find this whole approach is back to front. Would it not be best to create an array of jobs and advertise them as disabled friendly and provide training for them as well as putting in the investment with employers to create such jobs? I suspect this approach will be called out for what it is as the only jobs they have created are the jobs for the work coaches! I really think the ministers involved are approaching things in a backward fashion putting the cart before the horse. I think investment and encouragement and funds should be made available to employers to firstly create the jobs and then encourage people into them so long as they are disability friendly jobs.

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      · 40 minutes ago
      @MJ Missed out this paragraph after I posted it. 

      @James Is this to do with UC migration? Anyway, let us know what they said and how it went. Best of luck.

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      · 43 minutes ago
      @James "I am set to have a phone interview with regards claimant commitment and wanting work."
      I've recently received my migration letter. :(
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 11 hours ago
      @James Spot on post James! There is just no logical common sense put in to so many policies , it's infuriating to say the least , madness policies that don't or can't even work whether morally right either ! 
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      · 19 hours ago
      @James Great timing, @James - you'll be able helpfully to let them know about the buried reports' findings that "additional work coach support makes almost no difference to disabled claimants' employment prospects".

      When it comes to the Employment and Health discussion it's important you tell them that
      "according to their own research, the support conversation won’t have any lasting effects at all", but, in the spirit of cooperation, if it does last a few months, you'll have a positive sense of your own worth in the run up to the date when you'll no longer have to engage with this sh*t.

      Let them know, on all our behalf, wont you, how delighted we are that the government and dwp have found a route to finding welfare savings to spend on their pathways to work initiatives, at the exponential expense of claimants.

      And please, quote Plato at them, I dare you. We'll all visit you, SLB and Gingin in the tower. Good luck!
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 1 days ago
    Nobody was fooled when they appointed Timms to be the so called “new face of the dwp, ushering in a new era of transparency and respectability.” He has sold out, probably with one eye on his final salary that determines his pension. An uncomfortable watch whenever he is in the spotlight. As for being Christian, I hope this current s***storm is giving him sleepless nights.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 3 hours ago
      @Anon
      "Permission to email this to Timms?"

      No problem, though I don't rate your chances of getting a reply! Still, if you want to send it to him, feel free to add the following. It is a reading from chapter 3 of an esoteric Apocryphal text known as the Parable of the Fiscal Rules.


      1.  Now it came to pass at this time that Jesus and his disciples met a lame and starving beggar. And the beggar implored Jesus to help him, saying "Oh lord, I am lame and hungry! Behold, my beard is white, my belly is empty and my raiments humble! Come to my aid in my time of woe!"

      2. But Jesus was unmoved and refused to help the man.

      3. And this caused much confusion among the disciples, and they said to him, "Why oh lord, will you not help this lame and starving beggar? Is his beard not white, his belly empty and his raiments humble? Have you not often told us, lord, that it is easier for a camel to pass through the eye of a needle than for a rich man to enter the kingdom of God? And have you not also told us that if a rich man shall enter the Kingdom of Heaven he must first renounce all his worldly possessions and live in humility?"

      4. But Jesus chided them for their blindness, saying, "You have not understood my teachings and have fallen prey to the wickedness of outdated anti-business dogma. This is a grave sin in the eyes of the Almighty". And he urged them to repent of their sinful ways.

      5. But the disciples said again, "Come to his aid oh lord, that his suffering may be relieved!".

      6. But Jesus was again unmoved, and he said to them, "you have forgottten the scribes who write the daily chronicles, which are owned by Rothermere the non-dom, whose family's shirts are black, and Rupert the Antipodean. If I give alms to the poor they will say I am encouraging a dependency culture, and this will undermine our competitiveness. And this is a terrible sin."

      7. So the disciples said to Jesus, "can we do nothing to help him lord?"

      8. And Jesus replied, "we can help him. We can tell him to stand on his own two feet."

      9. But Thomas, the disciple who harboured many doubts, said, "but lord......he hath no legs."

      10. And Jesus said, "such obstacles are as nought to one who has an aspirational attitude. But this man hath fallen into the ways of sloth and idleness. I say unto you, his disability is a lifestyle choice."

      11. So the beggar went hungry, and the disciples marvelled at Jesus' wisdom.   


    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 5 hours ago
      @tintack Permission to email this to Timms?
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      · 9 hours ago
      @tintack Love your comment tintack 
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      · 10 hours ago
      @Bert Anyone can be pious.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 10 hours ago
      @tintack Love it! We must keep up the fight.  Thanks Benefits and Work for your brilliant work.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 1 days ago
    How to get the information to the right destinations is the challenge, so that everyone is in the know.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 1 days ago
    Can Benefits and Work perhaps pass these to the national media? It would sound more plausible coming from a respected advice service such as B&W? Thank you for highlighting this. I will pass this to my MP who is prob fed up with me by now.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 9 hours ago
      @Old Mother Old Mother -spot on
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      · 14 hours ago
      @rookie The only thing they will listen to is 1. Losing votes. 2. Legal challenges. 3. Money - a real conversation needs to be had about the cost of perpetual changing systems, monitoring compliance and the departments and contractors running this farce. 

      Disability and illness should be a medical matter only - it doesn’t change because it’s being monitored or used to score political points.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 23 hours ago
      @rookie agreed! 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 1 days ago
      @Moose Yes, the media, print and broadcast, all need to get this, and Timms should be made to listen.

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