I was awarded LCWRA until 27 February this year. I've had no contact from UC. Will my payment end?
charlotte112xx
Online Community Member Posts: 1 Listener
Hi I was just wondering if anyone could advice me please ? I was awarded LCWRA last year up until 27 February this year.
I’ve not received any messages or letters yet so I haven’t contacted UC as of yet.
Will my payment end after 27th February please.
Don’t know if I need to start providing sick notes again yet or not.
thank you!
thank you!
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Comments
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Hi and welcome to the community
Your lcwra will continue until a review has taken place and a decision made. The end date is just a guide for review
There are huge backlogs and they are prioritising new claims rather than reviews
You don't need to provide fit notes
I am in the same position even though they can reassess anytime I'm hoping to be left alone for a while yet1 -
I had to go to through the Tribunal service,you need to be seen by an assessor who is specific to your main problem,otherwise,genuine people have to go through at least a 7 month appeal,til it gets to a judge.None of these people are Disability Experts,its just a title they have been given,they are driven by numbers,not by how disabled some people are.The Judge said I should not be seen again for at least another 2yrs,as my evidence was consistent for 4yrs.I now have the "ongoing award" regarding PIP,which is a relief.0
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TerryG said:I had to go to through the Tribunal service,you need to be seen by an assessor who is specific to your main problem,otherwise,genuine people have to go through at least a 7 month appeal,til it gets to a judge.None of these people are Disability Experts,its just a title they have been given,they are driven by numbers,not by how disabled some people are.The Judge said I should not be seen again for at least another 2yrs,as my evidence was consistent for 4yrs.I now have the "ongoing award" regarding PIP,which is a relief.I'm sorry but i disagree. The assessment providers do not need to have any specific knowledge in any conditions. It's not about a diagnosis, it's how those conditions affect your ability to do any type of work.The majority of people are found to have LCW without any problems at all.TerryG said:they are driven by numbers,not by how disabled some people are.
Do you have a link regarding this? I would be very interested to see proof of what you're claiming here.0 -
Poppy,even on Scope it says that many people are being mis diagnosed by assessors who don't have relevant knowledge,if you don't believe it,that's entirely up to you,I was seen by a physiotherapist first time,when he asked how arthritus affects me,he has better knowledge of the mechanics than a nurse,In the same breath,would you want a physiotherapist to assess you if you had serious mental health issues,no you wouldn't.
People need to be assessed by the person who has the best knowledge of the problems a person is dealing with,its that simple.The Judge in my case said,"This man must not been seen for at least two years,as all the evidence was consistent over a sustained period of time.As were the Specialist and my GPs letters over a 4 Yr period,yet,a nurse with no further qualifications in any other medicine,said otherwise.I rest my case.0 -
TerryG said:Poppy,even on Scope it says that many people are being mis diagnosed by assessorsy other medicine,said otherwise.I rest my case.The assessors that do these assessments do not diagnose anyone.
As i previously advised, they don't need to have any knowledge of any specific conditions because it's not about a diagnosis and i stand by what i said.TerryG said:
People need to be assessed by the person who has the best knowledge of the problems a person is dealing with,its that simple.1 -
I couldn't agree with Poppy more @TerryG - it's not about a diagnosis. However, you may be surprised by how much an assessor knows due to their background. For example, I'm a long retired physio, but do you think I just saw people with a physical problem? As this forum also shows, many people have both physical & mental problems, which I found even in my student days,,,,,a young woman with a fractured pelvis & lower limb fractures due to a road traffic accident, who also had bipolar disorder, whom I treated, stands out in my memory. A 9 year old boy who'd had a stroke following surgery (an ileostomy) for ulcerative colitis, who was suffering from depression is another. After qualifying, I worked in a regional spinal injuries unit, with children with cerebral palsy, & was the Superintendent Physiotherapist of a large (11,00+ patients) mental health hospital. So even physios may understand mental health issues.Now speaking personally, I would say if I waited to see an assessor that would understand my own combination of disorders, I'd be waiting a very long time (something I've mentioned on Scope's online community). However, assessors will have a general background in many disorders, so transferable skills, whilst not needing to know about any diagnosis.0
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Did your payment end ?0
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ella1992 said:Did your payment end ?
No, not unless a new decision says otherwise. Which has been advised on your other thread. You said yourself that your payments have continued as normal since November on this thread here. https://forum.scope.org.uk/discussion/91145/unvcail-credits-work-thing#latest I think that's all the proof you need that it's an ongoing award.
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