Make things happen stickynote

Bearing Disability: 5 Tips you need to Prepare for PIP

Make things happen stickynote

So, lately I have spoken a lot about the disability benefit, Personal Independence Plan (PIP) and it was suggested by my dad that I write a post on what the assessor is looking for. So, if you have recently got a letter asking you to attend a PIP assessment, I have some insight on what to expect and how to treat the assessment. Here are 5 PIP Preparation tips.

Now, the first thing you need to be aware of is that the government DO NOT care how your disability affects you and how you struggle, they want to take your benefits away from you and will look for any excuse to do so.

It is your task to make it as hard for them as possible.

1. Make sure you have letters and documents to back up your claim. 

Send DWP copies of everything you have.

  • Doctor's letters going back from when you were a baby,
  • the assessment you had at the driving centre (if you have had one)
  • your school statement (if you had one)
  • letters from people who know you personally and professionally
  • a recent letter from all medical personnel and support workers.

The DWP are looking for any excuse NOT to pay you, don't give them one. Be prepared by having everything the PIP expects you not to have.

Do not give them space to breathe. Even if you have a clear, physical, visual or other disability, do this anyway because they will try and find anything that can go against you.  Currently, for me, they are trying to say that they could not find any medical records from when I was a child that showed how my Cerebral Palsy was treated or any medical records on it due to moving doctors. So, really, do not give them any room to wiggle.

I did not send any evidence the first time around because I believed that my disability was obvious. I believed that what I said I struggled with and the help I needed would mean that I would get the help I deserve, but that is not the case.

In my appeal, I sent the last two bullet points and was awarded the minimum daily living. I need the maximum Mobility and Daily living.

So I have now applied to the tribunal but DWP are arguing their case by saying they cannot find any evidence of my disability from childhood due to change in my doctor's surgery.

So send them everything, dating back from as far as possible. Make it hard for them because they certainly will make it hard for you. Prepare for PIP by thing everything is relevant.

2. Prepare by Recording Everything

recording equipment : laptop and usb microphone

Now, the DWP say they want you to burn the recording on 2 discs or memory sticks simultaneously while you are there, but don't worry about that. Take a recording device, a laptop and 2 memory sticks or discs. Put the recording on the laptop and do it one by one if you have to because they will still see you burn it onto two things, just not simultaneously. They may groan but do it anyway.

This is the best way to make sure that you are awarded points when you need them because the assessors will flat-out lie on your report. They WILL lie. There are many lies on mine, these include but are not limited to:

  • my anxiety levels,
  • my speech impediment and understanding,
  • how I handled my documents,
  • my ability to put my thumb and finger together,
  • how I walked out of the assessment.

Recording the assessment prevents these lies. You have a copy, they have a copy. They cannot then lie on your report.

So do this. Don't worry if this takes another 30-40 minutes because you need that extra time, you need that evidence and if they refuse it because you cannot burn it simultaneously, they cannot delete it from your computer so at least you still have a copy if you need one.

3. Think about what you CANNOT do.

If you are like me, you do not dwell on the cannots but look more at the can dos. Well, that is a big downfall at these assessments. Don't lie, but do make it clear that you struggle.

The more can dos that you give the assessor, the more points you will not get. I know it is  frustrating, but think long on hard about what you struggle with and answer every question with a short response:

  • No
  • it varies
  • That is hard for me

Do not begin any answer with yes unless the question they ask you is in the negative:

Assessor: Do you struggle with...

You: Yes.

Anything else and you are unlikely to get the point. During my assessment, I would try and elaborate on my answers; often and subconsciously using the word sometimes. That is a big mistake. I was often interrupted in my attempts to elaborate on my answers. The assessor would say that we would:

Get to how this effects you later.

Later never came. So my advice. Try and not say sometimes, give clear negatives. As I say, do not lie but always think about your worst day. Could you do this on a bad day. Describe your worst day to your assessor.

This is what you have to do. Because you would not be able to cope without that benefit on your worst day and the assessor are looking for your best days, do not give that to them!

Don't let the PIP Assessor interrupt

If they interrupt when you elaborate, stay calm and say you would rather get this bit out of the way first. I wish I had, instead., I tried to remember what I wanted to say while another question was thrown at me, then tried to remember another explanation on top of the original while a third question was thrown at me.

It made my anxiety come out. I struggled to speak, forgot everyday words, and still my report said I was fine. Make sure you answer when you want to and get it on recording.

4. Keep a diary of what you struggle with on a daily basis

Notebook and pen

Keep a diary and use it. Send it to them before your assessment if you can. Make it detailed.

Look at the criteria on the Gov website and start thinking how did that go for you today, how about last week? The week before? Note it down.

Did you just ask help to spread toast? Then write it down. Did someone help you get off a train? Someone help you with your bag? Read a sign?

Write it all down. Every single second of it.

5. Don't worry if you are refused

You are probably going to be refused if you can walk a tiny bit. People with MS, Cerebral Palsy and other disabilities where walking is limited but not impossible will know all about this. So if you can walk down the corridor, then you are probably going to be refused but you can appeal.

You must go through the Mandatory Reconsideration first. It is a waste of time, with 19% of people who go through Mandatory Reconsideration receiving a slightly higher award. That means you have a  81% of being refused twice but again, don't panic because the real magic happens at the tribunal.

71% of people who go through the tribunal win the appeal. That other 29% are usually people with temporary disabilities. The percentage is raising all the time too. If you are refused at the assessment, hold on and go through the tribunal.

Send them the same evidence you sent the DWP.


The Tribunal

I haven't gone through the Tribunal yet but have started the process. So this is what will happen.

You apply to the Tribunal and they will give DWP a month to respond. The DWP will send a document that is over 100 pages to the DWP on their reasoning. DO NOT PANIC

The first quarter of the pages will be the form you filled in when applying to PIP. In fact, most of it would be the evidence that you sent to the DWP.

The only original pages of the DWP will be the assessor report (around 40 pages long), the PIP categories and the points they are worth, evidence from your GP, and a 2-5 page letter of why they assessed you the way they did.

You will probably find some outlandish statements in that 2-5 page letter. My one said that my ability to drive shows that I do not need help. If I needed as much help as I said, then I would not be able to drive according to DVLA's guidelines. They urged the Tribunal to throw out my appeal.

This is a scare tactic.

The PIP Assessor forgot to mention my car is adapted for one-hand use; that it is automatic. They also say that going to university also shows that I am not as disabled as I say despite the fact that people who are more severely disabled than I do both, drive and go to university. Heck, some even have jobs on the side—something in which I would struggle to do.

So, yes, be prepared for some scare tactics. It's their way of hoping you will pull out. Don't pull out. The people on the tribunal are independent of the DWP and are genuinely interested in what YOU have to say, not what the DWP have to say.

Try and speak to your local welfare service. See if they can help you.

I'm wishing everyone who has to go through this awful process good luck in this game of checkmate with the DWP.


Thanks for Listening

Thank you for reading. I know some of my followers have gone through this process either directly or indirectly, so if you have anything more to add, do feel free to comment and share.

Anyone who wants to write a guest post, don't hesitate to contact me. Also, feel free to join my blogging group centred around disability and mental health.

~Shannon

13 thoughts on “Bearing Disability: 5 Tips you need to Prepare for PIP

  1. Good luck to you. I am sure the panel at tribunal will see sense.
    I do point 4 now already as I don’t trust the DWP and that they will act in Husband’s best interest when the renewal is coming up in four years’ time. So I am already collecting evidence. I’ve got a document with each criteria and ever time Husband gets support with something or we have an adverse event because something happened or went wrong, that goes in, too.
    I have already decided that if they decide Husband need to be assessed again in 4 years time, that the assessment will have to take place at an assessment centre. This is first and foremost because I need them to see how Husband feels and acts in an unfamiliar environment. It feels mean to do, but I need them to see.
    (And secondly, after the runaround and the way we have been treated since we started this process, they are no longer welcome in our home, and I do not want them in the house!).

    1. I completely understand <3 I hope in 4 years time, that you are not put under the amount of stress you were placed under this time. I believe I’ll win the tribunal so I’ll be doing point 4 next time and the recording of the assessment too. It’s a shame we are forced to protect ourselves like this. What is the world coming to? 🙁

  2. Great post. These assessments (and form filling) are so stressful for people. It’s really unfair. I understand they need to try to stop benefit fraud, but they’re attacking the wrong people.

    1. Completely agree with you. It’s amazing, but the reason they are attacking us is because they see us as the ones least likely to fight back and have support in our corner.

    1. Thank you Lauren. Waiting for a hearing date at the moment, they keep pushing it back, first Novemeber, then Decemeber, then Feb… I expected the wait though

  3. Hello I have just found your site and find it honest and informative
    I attended my pip assessment on Thursday and went straight to bed on getting home on Thursday evening all day in bed Friday I feel so depressed going over the interrogation over and over I know I have been honest and said the things I can and can’t do but feel so anxious and deflated why do I have to make myself feel so helpless to get a benefit I’m entitled to
    I have wengeners vasculitis lupus and Srohjens disease in other words my immune system is shot
    I’m now 66 years old just got my pension in May so maybe the thought is that it’s time the government take away my disability payment as I’m on statutory pension I believe that’s what they will do today I don’t feel I have the energy to fight another appeal

    1. PIP is hard, but Tribunal will be worth it. They favour the disabled claimant 79% of the time. Ignore the mandatory reconsideration. Just apply for it. But don’t put too much energy in the manatory because the tribunal is what matters. Mandatory is just a blockage to slow down proceedings.

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