Attending a PIP Telephone/Face to Face Assessment & Being Unable To Verbally Communicate
Pixistickx
Online Community Member Posts: 5 Connected
Hi all, I am the carer of someone with ASD which severely impacts their ability to communicate. They have regular periods of mutism where when they are overwhelmed, they are unable to verbally communicate at all, even with family members. This is even more apparent in situations where they are expected to interact with people unfamiliar to them or make and receive telephone calls.
We've answered the relevant questions in the form, sent along the supporting medical evidence and requested a paper based assessment due to this & the distress a face to face assessment would cause but there is no guarantee of actually receiving one.
Have PIP fully reverted back to face to face assessments now that the lockdowns etc. have ended or is telephone assessments still being carried out as well?
I read an article on Disability Claims UK that stated friends or family members are not able to answer for you as it does not go down well and that not responding or having your companion talk for you can irritate the assessor. They advise your companion can prompt you if they feel you haven't expanded on your answer enough but that seems to be the height of it.
Does anyone have any experience of attending a face to face or telephone assessment with a claimant and having to answer the questions for them as they are unable to do so themselves, does the assessor let the assessment carry on in these circumstances?
Not particularly relevant but we are based in Northern Ireland for anyone who has had similar circumstances with Capita in these parts and wants to share how they fared.
We've answered the relevant questions in the form, sent along the supporting medical evidence and requested a paper based assessment due to this & the distress a face to face assessment would cause but there is no guarantee of actually receiving one.
Have PIP fully reverted back to face to face assessments now that the lockdowns etc. have ended or is telephone assessments still being carried out as well?
I read an article on Disability Claims UK that stated friends or family members are not able to answer for you as it does not go down well and that not responding or having your companion talk for you can irritate the assessor. They advise your companion can prompt you if they feel you haven't expanded on your answer enough but that seems to be the height of it.
Does anyone have any experience of attending a face to face or telephone assessment with a claimant and having to answer the questions for them as they are unable to do so themselves, does the assessor let the assessment carry on in these circumstances?
Not particularly relevant but we are based in Northern Ireland for anyone who has had similar circumstances with Capita in these parts and wants to share how they fared.
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Comments
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The proportion of face to face assessments is reported to remain low (1in 13)
https://questions-statements.parliament.uk/written-questions/detail/2022-11-02/77643
However NI may be different.
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Does the person have an appointee? If so then they will be able to answer all the questions on their behalf. They can ring and ask for a telephone assessment.
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No appointee, they can live relatively independently with the right support in place to help but just really struggle with communication issues.poppy123456 said:Does the person have an appointee? If so then they will be able to answer all the questions on their behalf. They can ring and ask for a telephone assessment.
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Thanks for clarifying this for us @Pixistickx. Do they usually have any reasonable adjustments that support them with their communication issues?
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