applying for attendance alowance
Options
evsie
Community member Posts: 3 Listener
hello from me hope to learn here , just in process of applying for attendance alowance for both me and my husband , wish us luc
Comments
-
Disability Gamechanger - 2019
-
thank you have c,a.b coming down to help us with this , we are both over 70 and never had a benefit in our lives
-
Welcome and good luck
-
Benefits can be confusing, it's great to hear you have CAB coming to help you!
Disability Gamechanger - 2019 -
Good luck to you both!!
It took my wife 3 applications to get an award. The 'help' she had from a charity was poor beyond belief.
She is 75.
Warning, please be careful with using the CAB, their website offers advice on two matters that can only be described as poor.
-
thank you, we can they can only hope but try i am living with cancer and it is so stressful and i am very depressed and my husband suffers with osteporosis as well a bad copd and is basically confined to house as we have gales her reguarly over the winter, it is a struggle for us both
-
I would be very interested in how you get on with the AA claim.
I have brought this up before on this site and never actually received an answer that I could understand.
The CAB website (all that I can use as there are no useful advice agencies locally) states that you have to - have a disability or illness and need help or supervision throughout the day or at times during the night (even if you don’t currently get that help).
That definition in bold means (I am told) means that the need must be continual.
Is it continual throughout the day or only for parts of the day?
I haven't bothered to make a claim as I honestly don't know if my circumstances will fit that definition.
-
Good luck, I hope you get the AA. my dear friend is nearly 70 years old and has to attend a PIP assessment next month. When she asked the name of the doctor in attendance she was informed that it would not be a doctor but a paramedic or midwife!!!! She has a highly specific condition that only a specialist in that field can obviously understand, not a baby deliverer. I have advised her to go for AA. These 'assessors' can sometimes be nasty and tell untruths against claimants. I am surprised this has been allowed to go on for so long, the 'nasty party' should be ashamed of itself and halt and overhaul this disastrous system.
-
patriciahendy said:Good luck, I hope you get the AA. my dear friend is nearly 70 years old and has to attend a PIP assessment next month. When she asked the name of the doctor in attendance she was informed that it would not be a doctor but a paramedic or midwife!!!! She has a highly specific condition that only a specialist in that field can obviously understand, not a baby deliverer. I have advised her to go for AA. These 'assessors' can sometimes be nasty and tell untruths against claimants. I am surprised this has been allowed to go on for so long, the 'nasty party' should be ashamed of itself and halt and overhaul this disastrous system.Claiming AA may not be the right advice here. Your friend must be transferring from DLA to PIP because at that age you can't make a new claim for PIP. If they have a mobility award for DLA and put a claim in for AA there's no mobility award to AA which means they will lose it completely. AA criteria is completely different to PIP.A HCP doesn't have to be qualified in any specific condition because all conditions affect people differently, no 2 people are the same. PIP isn't awarded based on a diagnosis, it's how those conditions affect you daily.Lots of people claim PIP successfully first time, without any problems at all.I would appreciate it if members wouldn't tag me please. I have all notifcations turned off and wouldn't want a member thinking i'm being rude by not replying.If i see a question that i know the answer to i will try my best to help.
Brightness
Categories
- All Categories
- 13K Start here and say hello!
- 6.6K Coffee lounge
- 103 Games lounge
- 416 Cost of living
- 4.3K Disability rights and campaigning
- 1.9K Research and opportunities
- 199 Community updates
- 9.3K Talk about your situation
- 2.1K Children, parents, and families
- 1.6K Work and employment
- 776 Education
- 1.7K Housing and independent living
- 1.4K Aids, adaptations, and equipment
- 615 Dating, sex, and relationships
- 363 Exercise and accessible facilities
- 737 Transport and travel
- 31.5K Talk about money
- 4.3K Benefits and financial support
- 5.2K Employment and Support Allowance (ESA)
- 17K PIP, DLA, and AA
- 4.9K Universal Credit (UC)
- 6.3K Talk about your impairment
- 1.8K Cerebral palsy
- 868 Chronic pain and pain management
- 180 Physical and neurological impairments
- 1.1K Autism and neurodiversity
- 1.2K Mental health and wellbeing
- 319 Sensory impairments
- 824 Rare, invisible, and undiagnosed conditions
Do you need advice on your energy costs?
Scope’s Disability Energy Support service is open to any disabled household in England or Wales in which one or more disabled people live. You can get free advice from an expert adviser on managing energy debt, switching tariffs, contacting your supplier and more. Find out more information by visiting our
Disability Energy Support webpage.