Newly diagnosed ASD – Should I report change for Daily Living? PIP England

Hi, I’m looking for advice on whether to report a change of circumstances for PIP.

Current award:
Standard Mobility
0 points Daily Living
Award runs July 2024 – October 2027

Background: I originally scored 4 points for engaging socially (needs support), but was refused Daily Living overall. I took it to tribunal. A few days before the hearing DWP offered standard Mobility if I dropped the appeal, which I accepted.

I have now received a formal Autism Spectrum Disorder diagnosis (DSM-5 Autism Spectrum Condition – Level 1) through NHS Right to Choose. The assessment included ADOS-2, questionnaires and collateral information from my mother.

Key findings:
AQ10: 9/10
HADS Anxiety: 14 (abnormal range)
CAT-Q: 154 (high camouflaging)
Emotional Quotient low across domains
Lifelong social communication difficulties
Significant anxiety and shutdown after social interaction. 

My functional reality:
I avoid all social contact unless essential (doctor/Jobcentre).
I cannot attend appointments alone.
My mother accompanies me and sometimes speaks on my behalf.

If she cannot attend, I cancel.
After appointments I am extremely drained and sleep for hours.
Without her support I would stop attending entirely.

I can cook and take medication independently, but my mother collects prescriptions and helps monitor side effects.
My situation hasn’t worsened I just now have formal diagnostic evidence that clarifies the severity of my social impairment. I also feel I can explain my difficulties more clearly now.

My question:

Is this sufficient grounds to report a change of circumstances for Daily Living (Activity 9), or would DWP likely argue “no change”.

Thank you.

Parents
  • Thanks for the responses.

    Just to clarify, I scored 4 points for engaging previously, but I cannot attend appointments alone, cancel if my mother cannot attend, and would stop attending entirely without her. After appointments I shut down and sleep for hours.

    Would this meet 9d (overwhelming psychological distress), or do tribunals usually expect panic attacks or visible meltdowns? I attempted a training course recently but suffered a panic attack and burn out. My report mentions this and high camouflaging and the effects.

    Also is my assessment report good evidence? 

  • I think they would likely look at it that you have that support already and so therefore don't need money to gain that support. 

    I don't think they'd count needing to sleep as overwhelming psychological distress unfortunately. I think they'd be expecting visible meltdowns.

    Your assessment report would be good evidence but you'd probably need more than that I think.

    It is really hard to get pip for autism.

Reply
  • I think they would likely look at it that you have that support already and so therefore don't need money to gain that support. 

    I don't think they'd count needing to sleep as overwhelming psychological distress unfortunately. I think they'd be expecting visible meltdowns.

    Your assessment report would be good evidence but you'd probably need more than that I think.

    It is really hard to get pip for autism.

Children
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