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.
    · 4 hours ago
    Another report on the start of the PIP assessment review. Unfortunately headed with a photo of grinning Kendall 

    https://www.theguardian.com/society/2025/may/12/liz-kendall-dwp-disability-benefit-assessment


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      · 2 hours ago
      @Gingin Thanks for the warning.
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    · 6 hours ago

    Deny as much as they like but this is from DWP's own figures.
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    · 7 hours ago
    Hope this is shared far and wide to make MP's aware.
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    · 7 hours ago
    A review of the PIP assessment has started and there were questions about this in the Commons today:. 


    'Referring to a proposed benefits change which would delay access to the health element of Universal Credit until a person reaches age 22, Labour MP for East Thanet Polly Billington asked Ms McGovern: “Can she explain to me how denying access to the heath-related element of Universal Credit will help these young people into work?”
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      · 6 hours ago
      @gingin
      Kendall and Co. Just trotting out the same old lies, dismissals and ignorance.

      They'll get their 'Stakeholders and other experts', the architects of all of this, to do their reviews and consultations, come up with yet more lies and, carry on regardless.  They won't engage with disabled people or DPO's, just as they haven't done thus far.

      They're sick in the head, making out like they genuinely care and will make sure it is all done with the utmost care, consideration and compassion.

      Claiming it is for the better and they will ensure they look after those who cannot work, whilst giving the choice to those who can.  There is no choice in this for us, this is being forced upon, us against our will.

      Utterly shameful.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 8 hours ago
    To be fair to Timms, he may believe that his Department's preferred development style of "test and learn" will ensure these tools actually work. I've no doubt he has his work cut out for him...
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      · 6 hours ago
      @Kelly @Kelly, I've given him the best of my benefit of the doubt. He's either fully on board with the madness or he's totally incompetent.
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      · 6 hours ago
      @Kelly Though he didn't believe that when he was in opposition.
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    · 9 hours ago
    Would be a good idea to send this to your MPs as I bet most haven't seen it. This and far more like this is what they need to make an informed vote. 
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      · 7 hours ago
      @robbie Very positive news, thanks for sharing. It may not be the majority of Labour MPs yet, but it's very damaging to Labour. 
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    · 9 hours ago
    Word will out

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    · 9 hours ago
    Standard but positive response received to my email last night highlighting these buried reports to my MP:

    Thank you for getting in contact with me about the recently announced changes to welfare benefits, including PIP. My Liberal Democrat colleagues are very concerned about this and have written to the Secretary of State, Liz Kendall, raising our concerns directly with her. You can see the letter here: https://x.com/stevedarlingmp/status/1915380540607193341?s=46&t=_UyZuOmiLLIISJwFv1pXEg

    PIP provides vital support for people with various serious conditions – it is a lifeline, not a luxury. According to the Government’s own impact assessment, changes to the Personal Independence Payments assessment will push 300,000 people into poverty, while the cuts to the Universal Credit health top-up will have this effect on 50,000 people.

    It is also not an out-work-benefit, often supporting disabled people to actually enter or stay in work. The Office for Budget Responsibility has said that the government does not have any robust evidence that its plans would lead to a significant increase in employment rates.

    My Liberal Democrats are very worried about the broader impacts of these cuts. There are many benefits prerequisite on receiving PIP, from blue badges to carers allowance. The Government’s own analysis shows 150,000 carers will lose out on their carers allowance or the UC Carer Element due to their proposed cuts.

    Although reforming the disability benefits system is necessary, restricting eligibility and reducing benefit levels will not support people into work. On the contrary, it risks pushing the families who already face the most significant challenges further into poverty.

    We have to bring the welfare bill down and support more people into work. It’s right for people and our economy. But you don’t do that by just slashing support.

    If the Government was serious about cutting welfare spending it would get serious about fixing health and social care and the broken Department of Work and Pensions.

    That is why it has been so disappointing to see the Government’s lack of urgency in this area, putting their social care review on a three-year timeline, kicking projects like new hospitals into the long grass, and still no overhaul of the Department with meaningful co-design and input from disabled people.

    Until that changes, no meaningful drop in the welfare bill will arrive, and the misery that people are suffering will continue. Please be assured that I will do all I can to support my constituents through this extremely worrying time.

    Best wishes,

    Anna

    Anna Sabine MP
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      · 6 hours ago
      @Gingin That's great, @gingin, well done.
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    · 9 hours ago
    Just for clarity, @gingin/Gingin - same person?
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      · 8 hours ago
      @keepingitreal keepingitreal - Yes! Sometimes it autocorrects to Funghi - hahaha!
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    · 10 hours ago
    There are some  goo hard working Work Coaches in DWP..... and some really bad ones... but the problem is with employers not wanting to take people with disabilities when there are plenty of candidates without "issues".
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      · 3 hours ago
      @HBS Especially since they are now paying more tax for their current employees. Any financial flexibility they had has been pulled away by labour. If I was a small or medium business struggling to stay afloat I would be risk averse too
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    · 10 hours ago
    What makes me laugh about all this while reading comments on the articles that are clearly designed to stir people up is that some commenters will insist they're anti-propaganda and are smarter than the government but will then turn around and say that welfare benefits are a "leftist concept" and should be done away with and that disabled people are scroungers because of (checks notes) ah yes: propaganda.

    It's particularly amusing when you pull out facts and figures (i.e. pointing out that there's only 800,000 or so vacancies and there's millions of jobseekers as it is) and they got deathly quiet. They're just so desperate to say they just hate disabled people and resent their existence but that's not the "cool" thing to do while trying to "own the leftists", it seems.
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    · 12 hours ago
    All things that WE already knew and could have told them, had they bothered to ask.

    This needs to be made public and mainstream along with everything else.  Shove it under the noses of all the MP's and the media, point it out to them at every jobcentre and work coach meeting, every PIP, UC, LCWRA review and tribunal.  Show the UN, the ECHR and any other body possible.

    It's just lies on top of lies throughout their entire plan, as per usual.
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    · 12 hours ago
    ** part of my last post was missing
    Should read, that MPs against this may get an interview with channel 4 at least they not as bad as BBC for the bias, to get this information in part at least known to the public
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 12 hours ago
    Thank you all at B&W for all the information you give us.
    It's not a shock really to know about the continued underhanded tactics, there is no limit to their despicable acts.
    As others have said, this information needs to be made public, and for that to be possible it would have to be put on billboards, because what media source / outlet can be fully trusted to publish  or announce this in its entirety?

    Hopefully Diane Abbott and other MP's who are against the cuts know about this, we can only hope they would get a chance of  an 

    In all of this we can only expect the worst and hope for the best. 

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    · 14 hours ago
    There are a couple of decent youtubers that are against the cuts and put up very frequent videos, I wonder if it's worth sending this information to them so that we an make more people aware.
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      · 9 hours ago
      @Pixelmum Yes it is worth it because we aren’t getting it out there as much as we need
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    · 15 hours ago
    They should hire disabled people and people with health conditions who are able to work from home to be work coaches for disabled people on benefits. But they wont, because:

    A) No one actually wants to hire disabled people and people with health conditions to work from home, certainly not the DWP or the government.

    B) Disabled people supporting disabled people will more likely be able to see and understand that when someone says they cannot do a job no matter what support, they truly cannot do it - because we know we're not liars, that we work if we can, that it's beyond difficult even in the best circumstances... and pushing/threatening people never helps them magically be able to work. So I suppose we'd miss "targets" with our silly empathy and understanding...

    That said, if the DWP want to hire me as a work coach for specifically disabled people or people with health conditions, come get me. I'll do it, and do a damn better job at it than this report suggests too. Lived experience counts for a lot.
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      · 9 hours ago
      @Dannan So agree! The DWP should lead by example in their employment of disabled / health conditions people. 

      In fact the whole government/ local govt  should. 
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      · 12 hours ago
      @Dannan They need the minister for "Common Sense" first... But, that didin't help much the prewious ones..
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    · 16 hours ago
    This latest news report published by benefits and work just shows how underhand Timms department is and what a complete fiasco these whole plans from the government are. Badly thought out, badly planned with just one goal in mind. To get as many vulnerable disabled people off their lifeline benefits and straight on the dole. I shall be emailing my MP and making him aware of the DWP reports forthwith. Thank you benefits and work team. 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 17 hours ago
    In addition to this, GOV.UK also publish notifications of updates to their existing documents, including benefit guidelines etc., which are very useful

    >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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