Policy Manager Nick Medhurst takes us through Wednesday's landmark ruling on DLA and why it matters for people with cystic fibrosis.
On Wednesday the Supreme Court ruled that the government’s decision to stop Cameron Mathieson’s Disability Living Allowance (DLA) payments, as he lay in the hospital where he would eventually pass away, was unlawful, with judges labelling it “grossly unfair”.
On Wednesday the Supreme Court ruled that the government’s decision to stop Cameron Mathieson’s Disability Living Allowance (DLA) payments, as he lay in the hospital where he would eventually pass away, was unlawful, with judges labelling it “grossly unfair”.
The government had argued that they were “paying twice” for
Cameron’s care.
Cameron had cystic fibrosis, Duchenne muscular dystrophy and
other long-term health issues, and passed away in 2012 at the age of five,
having spent over two years in hospital.
Cameron’s family continued to fight an injustice that hit
them in their darkest hours, on behalf of everyone who has and will face the
same situation.
The case revolves around a government directive, which
demands that an individual’s benefits are stopped after they spend over 12
consecutive weeks in hospital. This is apparently “to prevent double provision”
– in other words, the government don’t believe they should have to support a
family financially, if they are already picking up the medical bill in
hospital.
This fundamental misunderstanding – that an individual’s or
a family’s need for financial support vanishes as soon as you step on to hospital
grounds – is obviously wrong, something supported
by research, conducted by Contact a Family and The Children’s Trust with
families who found themselves in the same circumstances:
- 99% said
they provide more or the same level of care when their child is in
hospital compared to when at home.
- 93% said
that their costs relating to their child's disability increase when their
child is in hospital.
Increased travel, accommodation and food costs are simple
examples but the reality is more complex and many families will find themselves
significantly harder-up in such periods.
So Wednesday’s ruling is a very important victory in the
fight to recognise the true costs of living with a long-term health condition
or caring for someone with one.
Cameron’s father, Craig, told the BBC that the ruling “is a
fantastic legacy for Cameron.” And its ramifications could be hugely
significant for us as a community.
Cameron Mathieson was very young and very unwell when he
passed away but his short life and his family’s courage to take forward the
fight in his honour, struck a blow for everyone living with a long-term health
condition who says that life is worth more than the cost of medical care.; We,
as a society, must work hard to remove barriers to leading a happy and
fulfilling life.
So when we hear nameless DWP spokespeople
telling us that:
"Up to now, DLA has been
suspended when a child is in receipt of long-term NHS inpatient care in order
to prevent double provision - the taxpayer paying twice for the same thing.
This has been the case for more than 20 years"
– we can say they were wrong and that was 20 years too long, denying the basic support
that can go some way to meeting an individual’s or a family’s non-medical needs,
often when it was needed most. Their careless and miserly policy-making caused
unnecessary pain and hardship.
For many people with cystic fibrosis – children and adults –
welfare support is a vital lifeline, enabling work, socialising, education,
exercise and physically getting to clinic. Cameron Mathieson’s legacy for the CF
community is a renewed strength and resolve to tell society that we can turn a
little basic support into much more and we can achieve great things.
For information on benefits, contact
our helpline on 0300 373 1000.
Thank you, Nick. Very well said. I hope you will all use this judgement to insist on being treated fairly according to the reality of your situation. This is what we fought for. Not only to prevent them doing it to Cam again, bit to win in a way that prevents them ever doing it to anyone else either.
ReplyDeleteCraig Mathieson.