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Minister says GPs must help cut claims

Posted: 06 January 2005 | Subscribe Online


Family doctors have rejected government claims that they are failing to do enough to persuade people to come off incapacity benefit.

Department for Work and Pensions minister Jane Kennedy told the Social Market Foundation last month that two-thirds of the UK's 2.7 million incapacity benefit claimants had been told by their doctors not to work, despite them having "common health conditions" that should not prevent work.

"Even though people with common health conditions can be helped back to work for their own well-being, few are told this by their GP," Kennedy said. "This reflects the prevailing culture among health service practitioners of the need to protect their patients from work."
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But a British Medical Association spokesperson said: "GPs are patient advocates not policemen. You can't tackle something with a broad brush as every patient is different - their period of recovery is different."

Kennedy's speech followed the government's pledge in December's pre-budget report to build on the permitted work rules, under which incapacity benefit claimants are helped to try out work without automatically losing their benefits.

The government is also believed to have dropped any plans to limit the amount of time for which incapacity benefit can be claimed in favour of a flat rate. Currently the rate rises to £72 after a year, £16 above the initial rate.


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