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Britain’s Social Policy Disregards the Rights of Disabled and Chronically Sick People

1-11-2018 < Global Research 42 1096 words
 

Mo Stewart, an Independent disability studies researcher and fellow of the Centre for Welfare Reform, sent a letter to the Guardian newspaper last week to acknowledge the tenth anniversary of the adoption of the Work Capability Assessment (WCA) by the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP), as used to resist funding the Employment and Support (ESA) long-term sickness and disability benefit to those in greatest need. Influenced by corporate America, the deplorable treatment by the DWP of chronically ill and disabled people, who live in fear of the WCA, is well documented and the Guardian had published letters in the past on the same subject yet failed to acknowledge this significant anniversary and failed to publish the letter. Co-signed by over 80 individuals made up of doctors, academics, charities, carers, campaigners, journalists and researchers along with other members of the public, it is cause for concern that the Guardian would fail to publish this most important of all letters.


Is this ongoing scandal becoming too politically sensitive, hence the Guardian’s refusal to publish? Mo Stewart’s research over the past ten years has exposed the fact that successive UK governments adopted a disability denial assessment model, co-designed by the second worst healthcare insurance company in America. The WCA is used to deny genuine claimants access to desperately needed financial support, with links to thousands of deaths and a disturbing increase in suicides linked to the fatally flawed WCA which disregards diagnosis, prognosis and the past medical history of the ESA claimant. The overall objective of this government-backed project is truly alarming. As official government advisers for welfare claims management, a notorious American healthcare corporation has been covertly influencing UK social policy since 1994, with the final goal being the planned demolition of the welfare state to be replaced with an American style private healthcare insurance backed system.


A more in-depth report, written by Mo Stewart for TruePublica can be READ HERE. The contents should shock anyone mainly because of the numbers of deaths involved as successive UK governments reject the welfare state, adopt American social policy, and watch as the entire national press resist identifying this American corporate influence with UK social policy.


The rejected letter to The Guardian is reproduced here.

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The tenth anniversary of the WCA which introduced American designed hostility against chronically sick and disabled people


The identified government hostility against disabled people isn’t disputed (disabled people facing government hostility in the UKtheguardian.com, 11th May), yet there has been little mention of the consequences, with disability hate crimes climbing by 213%, and a link to the Work Capability Assessment (WCA) with a vast increase in suicides.



Five years of rhetoric by the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) during the coalition government’s term in office was successfully used to belittle chronically ill and disabled people who claimed the Employment and Support Allowance. To access the benefit, claimants are obliged to endure the fatally flawed WCA, which disregards diagnosis, prognosis and past medical history. Death was always inevitable for thousands of people. Introduced by the DWP in October 2008, the WCA was created following research funded with £1.6million by America’s second largest health insurance giant, who were advisers to the British government on ‘welfare claims management’ since 1994.


To date Coroner’s Inquests, the British Medical Association, the Royal College of General Practitioners, the British Psychological Society, MIND and the Work and Pensions Select Committee have all deemed the WCA to be ‘unfit for purpose’. The DWP disregard all official reports not commissioned by them, demonstrating the preventable harm created by the WCA as used to guarantee that the psychological security of the welfare state would be destroyed to make way for the eventual adoption of private healthcare insurance to replace the welfare state; as all planned since 1982. October 2018 is the tenth anniversary of the adoption of the WCA. When will it be stopped?


Mo Stewart   – Independent disability studies researcher


Ellen Clifford  – Campaigns & Policy Manager, Inclusion London


Professor Peter Beresford – Co-Chair, Shaping Our Lives


Dr Jay Watts – Consultant Clinical Psychologist, London


Dr Richard House – Chartered Psychologist, Stroud


Dr Christopher Johnstone – Retired GP, Glasgow


Dr Rich Moth – Social Work Action Network


Dr Maria Berghs – DeMontfort University, Leicester


Dr Kay Inckle – University of Liverpool


Dr Nigel Williams – University of the West of England


Dr Colin Goble – University of Winchester


Professor Tanya Titchkosky – University of Toronto, Canada


Lewis Elward – MA graduate, University of Liverpool


Julia N Daniels – University of Sheffield


Alyssa Hillary – University of Rhode Island, USA


Liz Adams Lyngback – University of Stockholm


Gail Ward – Disability campaigner, Newcastle


Sioux Blair-Jordan – Disability advocate


Barbara Hulme – Disability campaigner


Susan Pashkoff – Political activist


Lorraine Harding – Disability Labour


Fran Springfield – Disability Labour


Sophie Talbot – Disability Labour


Dave Townsend – Disability Labour


Kathy Bole – Disability Labour


Simon Lydiard – Disability Labour


Claire Harris – Disability Labour


Nico Pollen – Disability Labour


Pat Onions – Pat’s Petition


Rosemary O’Neil – CarerWatch


John McArdle – Black Triangle Campaign


John Frost – Disability campaigner


Jean Devlin – DPAC Glasgow


Leanne Theresa Purvis – Disabled


Julia Bell – Disability rights


Tony Dowling – People’s Assembly, North East


Annie Bishop – Advocate


Susan Archibald – Scottish Disability Rights


Julie Forshaw – Disabled activist


Carole Robinson – Disabled


Jonathan Fletcher – Project 125


Karen Whelan-Springer – Derbyshire DPAC


Wendy Denton – Disabled


Paul Anderson – Glasgow MIND


Ian Kerr – DPAC Glasgow Rail


Sian Roberts – Disabled


Dawn Wilson – Benefit advocate


Kerry Tubbrit – Carer


Vicky Gisborne – Carer


Dawn Quinonostante – Mental health campaigner


Sam Downie – Actor and disability rights campaigner, disabled actor


George Berger – Retired academic


Chris McCabe – Carer


Kathryne Wray – Disability activist


Ian Jones – WOW campaign


Neil Vaughan – Appeals representative


Kate Belgrave – Journalist


Denise McKenna – Mental Health Resistance Network


Abbie Chambers – Disability campaigner


Linda Pike – Carer


John Kelly – Musician


Natalie Miles – Medical Student


Dominique Payne – Disability campaigner


Jayne Gowland – Carer


Sue Jones – Disability campaigner


Trevor Bark – Welfare Activist


Ken and Tracey McClymont – Founders of Dudley CIL


John McGovern – Disability rights campaigner


Rick Burgess – Disabled activist


Anne Pridmore – Director, Being The Boss


Ruth Bowling – Carer


Alasdair Cameron – Launchpad/ReCoCo


Jan Turner – Director, Being the Boss


Helene Ayton – Carer


Mirium Binder – Disability campaigner


Carl Liddle – Disabled


Pat Aitchison – Disabled


Jennifer Dunstan – Sheffield Heeley Labour Campaigns Officer


Morvenna Richards – Disability campaigner


Tony Aldis – Open Eye Films


Andrea Burford – Community campaigner


Barb Roberts – Disability Coordinator


Jack Gray – National Autistics Society


Paul Ferry – Disabled


Graham Vanbergen – Journalist


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Featured image is from TruePublica.



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