wishface said:i just cannot believe that they, beyond anyone else, will agree that I have such a condition without one. Otherwise you'd have a lot more people than even are being passed already getting through surely. If regular doctors are reluctant to believe the possibility of these kinds of condition, why would a tribunal doctor and a judge be any different?
The point, wishface, is that they don't need to agree that you have condition X, Y, or Z, because your eligibility for ESA is not based on whether you have a named, diagnosed, condition or not. It is based on how your difficulties affect your ability to find and keep work.
Just tell them, honestly and openly, what difficulties you have and how they affect your ability to find and keep work.
If your difficulties do meet the eligibility crieria, then you, most probably, will win the appeal.
If your difficulties do not meet the eligibility crieria, then you, most probably, will not win the appeal.
Don't worry about what diagnosis you may, or may not, have, it is not relevant, it just makes explaining the difficulties easier.
wishface said:i just cannot believe that they, beyond anyone else, will agree that I have such a condition without one. Otherwise you'd have a lot more people than even are being passed already getting through surely. If regular doctors are reluctant to believe the possibility of these kinds of condition, why would a tribunal doctor and a judge be any different?
The point, wishface, is that they don't need to agree that you have condition X, Y, or Z, because your eligibility for ESA is not based on whether you have a named, diagnosed, condition or not. It is based on how your difficulties affect your ability to find and keep work.
Just tell them, honestly and openly, what difficulties you have and how they affect your ability to find and keep work.
If your difficulties do meet the eligibility crieria, then you, most probably, will win the appeal.
If your difficulties do not meet the eligibility crieria, then you, most probably, will not win the appeal.
Don't worry about what diagnosis you may, or may not, have, it is not relevant, it just makes explaining the difficulties easier.