In a recent Dispatches program http://www.channel4.com/programmes/dispatches/episode-guide/series-117/episode-1, a doctor went undercover to record the training process for ATOS, and was told by his trainer that ESA (the new disability benefit brought in by New Labour in 2008 to replace Incapacity Benefit) and the WCA are designed to remove people from disability benefits, and that they expect ATOS to find 89% of people fit for work.
The human cost of this target is huge, with 32 people a week dying after being declared fit for work http://blogs.mirror.co.uk/investigations/2012/04/32-die-a-week-after-failing-in.html. Many disabled people have died from their illness shortly after being told they are fit for work, including a local man who died of his heart condition just 3 weeks after ATOS told him he was fit to work. http://www.birminghammail.net/news/top-stories/2012/07/04/birmingham-dad-dies-of-heart-condition-after-being-ruled-fit-for-work-97319-31317519/
Talk to disabled people about ATOS and the one thing you will hear time and time again is fear. The fear strikes when the letter arrives calling you for assessment. This letter comes even if you have an incurable, unchanging or degenerative condition. The tests can happen annually, and some people even find themselves called for reassessment just weeks after they have had a successful appeal. Or it comes when you receive the ESA50 form to apply for the benefit, a big lump of paper, designed to scare and confuse, intended so that people will not complete it properly. If you’re filling one of these in, do get advice, especially if you have a variable condition.
The fear continues as you wait for the assessment, knowing that doctors advice will be ignored in favour of a ticklist that doesn’t take into account variable conditions, doesn’t mention work and will award no points for manual dexterity if you can use one finger on one hand. (zero points means there is no problem).
Fear stays there until you receive the letter telling you if you are fit for work or not. You might get put in the “support group” where it’s accepted that you aren’t going to be able to work. Or the “Work Related Activity Group” (WRAG), where they say you are fit for work of some kind with the right support (and if there were jobs available, or employers willing to take on someone who will need more time off than other people for medical appointments, or runs the risk of falling very ill very quickly.. but they don’t mention these barriers to employment of course). Or you get told you are fit for work and pushed off to JSA unemployment benefit.
And the fear doesn’t stop then – the wait for the reassessment for those in the support and WRAG groups, the loss of income and support for those kicked off to JSA, the impending prospect of the Work Programme and http://www.guardian.co.uk/society/2012/feb/16/disabled-unpaid-work-benefit-cuts for those found fit for work (either in the WRAG group or like anyone else unemployed and on JSA), and the sanctions regime that has seen tens of thousands of disabled people lose benefits for up to 6 months. https://johnnyvoid.wordpress.com/2012/03/15/over-10000-benefit-sanctions-applied-to-sick-and-disabled-people-last-year/
The fear needs to end, the WCA needs to be suspended now, and altered in a major way so that it is a fair assessment http://benefitscroungingscum.blogspot.co.uk/2012/08/breaking-news-possible-new-wca.html, and ATOS need to be removed from the contract.
You can still take part in the ATOS games and help to make this happen:
Tommorrow (Wed 29th), DPAC will deliver a coffin full of messages from you.
On Thursday 30th: Phone jam! Let’s flood Atos with calls, and generate a Twitter-storm they can’t ignore!
Then on Friday 31st, join DPAC in London where they’re teaming up with UK Uncut for the Closing ATOS ceremony, at ATOS HQ in Triton Square, London from 12:45.
For more information on these events, go to the DPAC website http://www.dpac.uk.net/2012/08/latest-information-on-atos-games-week/