Hi! New member, PIP phone assessment, re: urinary incontinence

I had a PIP assessment over the phone for a new application which is my first application. The assessor asked me lots of irrelevant questions and seemed to be keen to create reasons to deny me the benefits. I felt that her tone was sarcastic at times. She made me feel bad for applying for a benefit. I have changed my job because of this condition, now work at home although I tried to accept work outside home on two occasions to try and see whether I can manage it. My income has gone down and my expenses up because of this condition which started a year ago and worsened since. I made the application two months ago. After hearing a lot of stories about how dishonest the assessors can be, I wondered if I can get a copy of her report to check if she recorded our conversation accurately. Has anyone tried to do this? and what was the outcome? If she has lied in the report I will appeal anyway but I am trying to avoid the delay this would cause. Thank you for any responses.
Comments
-
The assessor can't refuse you PIP because they don't make decisions. Only a decision maker can make a decision. The assessor makes recommendations only. Many people think the questions asked are irrelevant but they will be more relevant than you think they are.
Please also be aware that the assessment process isn't there for them to write what you said word for word. It's for them to gather more evidence to support your claim. They then write the report which is their opinion based on what you said in the form, any additional evidence you sent and what you said during the assessment.
Once the report is returned to DWP you can ring PIP to request a copy. Please note that it's a recommendation only. Whilst they mostly go with the report, it has been known for them to go against it.
Whether it's possible to score enough of points needed for an award will totally depend on exactly how your conditions affect you. It's not awarded based on any diagnosis.1 -
Hey @mayra, welcome to our community. I'm sorry you had a really bad experience with your assessment. What Poppy says about the assessment is true, but there can be bad assessors as well as good assessors. You can get the report once it is submitted to see what it recommends. If you feel it has misinterpreted things and the decision is not what you feel correct then there is the appeals process!
You can read more about the appeals process here: Appealing a DWP decision | Disability charity Scope UK
Please do let us know if you have any other questions or are unsure about anything1 -
Thank you Poppy123456 and Jimm_Scope for your replies. I will contact them and ask for a copy of the recommendations.0
-
Hi @ mayra - & welcome to the community. Just to add to what poppy has said, the assessors are not dishonest, nor can you prove that they had any intent to lie. They consider what you've said, & then write their opinion in their report, which is just a recommendation. A decision maker will look at this report, your initial claim form & any evidence you'd sent. That's not to say that the assessor's tone was good, nor should you have been made to feel bad for applying.Because of all these things it's not always a good idea to ask for a copy of an assessor's report, rather wait for your decision letter. If needed, it's this decision letter that you need to respond to, not the assessor's report. It's a bit premature at this stage to consider you might need to appeal, at the moment you just need to wait for your decision letter before you could do a Mandatory Reconsideration if indeed needed, where another decision maker would look at everything again.As poppy rightly says, PIP isn't about any diagnosis rather how your disability affects certain aspects of daily living &/mobility.1
-
Just wanted to ask a question to people who have more knowledge of this system. Do the assessors have access to DWP computing system? For example, can they see if you previously applied for any other benefits, people who are registered at your address, your communications with them?0
-
They will know if you’ve previously applied for that benefit and been refused or you already have an award in place.
They wont know if you claim any other benefits unless you told them. They certainly won’t have access to any information of anyone you may live with, unless you tell them.
1 -
Thank you Poppy1234560
-
hi all,
move just joined the forum. I had my phone assessment yesterday and got confused.I’ve bladder problems but when assessor asked I was so embarrassed and said no. Then he asked if I drive which I do. He asked if I’ve fallen which I had in the past but I said no as I got confused that it might affect my driving. I don’t know why I was so stupid but this morning I wrote a note about being embarrassed about my bladder issues so and said no and uploaded on the pip account.
not sure if I’ve done it right?Should I also call them to clarify.
I’ve not got any text yet.
please advise.0 -
Hi again @Mila01 I believe I'd answered your question on your original discussion?
Again, this discussion is from early 2024, so it's doubtful the original poster will reply.0
Categories
- All Categories
- 14.9K Start here and say hello!
- 7K Coffee lounge
- 81 Games den
- 1.7K People power
- 101 Announcements and information
- 23.2K Talk about life
- 5.5K Everyday life
- 272 Current affairs
- 2.3K Families and carers
- 855 Education and skills
- 1.9K Work
- 501 Money and bills
- 3.5K Housing and independent living
- 997 Transport and travel
- 683 Relationships
- 72 Sex and intimacy
- 1.4K Mental health and wellbeing
- 2.4K Talk about your impairment
- 857 Rare, invisible, and undiagnosed conditions
- 916 Neurological impairments and pain
- 2K Cerebral Palsy Network
- 1.2K Autism and neurodiversity
- 38K Talk about your benefits
- 5.8K Employment and Support Allowance (ESA)
- 19.2K PIP, DLA, ADP and AA
- 7.5K Universal Credit (UC)
- 5.4K Benefits and income