Asperger Diagnosis

Hello, I am posting here as someone unemployed with problems that may or may not be on the autistic spectrum, specifically Aspergers. I have the chance to get a diagnosis next month, though getting there will be problematic. This has caused me to re-evaluate the purpose of this. Specifically is it worth it? What will getting a diagnosis (if at all) achieve? What doors does it open? As someone out of work I can’t see it enabling a successful ESA claim, and there’s no way I will get through the WCA.

The whole purpose of this isn’t to get a label; I know the issues I have so that means nothing to me alone. The point is really about money: about securing an inecom somehow. I find it difficult dealing with full time work (not that there is any) and having to deal with JSA is a nightmare. I am on the Work Programme but that is no help at all and they have admitted they have nothing to offer and no experience of dealing with mental health issues of any kind. So where does that leave me?

ESA is supposed to exist to help people like me that have some problems, but instead the WCA is used to keep the claimant count down. The end result is that you are either too ill to work (if you’re even found as such) or you are perfectly OK. If you fall inbetween you are ignored. That’s not what’s meant to happen. My GP supports that I should be on ESA, but is dead against writing a sick note. He doesn’t understand the benefits system, unsurprisingly, and really isn’t much help at all.

I don’t want to dismiss the appointment out of hand (and I doubt he’d be happy if I did), but the purpose of getting it is to enable support. So the question is what support does it enable?

Parents
  • I failed the WCA with zero points too!

    It doesn't automatically mean you'll never ever get on ESA, it just means you have to be more persistent.

    Also the criteria have changed very recently (within the last year or so) specifically to take more account of Asperger's and other Autistic Spectrum Disorders!

    Go for the diagnostic assesment, and if you do get diagnosed as being on the spectrum, try again.

    And insist that your GP writes sick notes - he has a legal duty to do what's best for your health, both mental and physical, and if the DWP take away your benefits because he refuses to write sick notes when that's what's expected of him by the DWP when you're applying for ESA, then he has failed in that duty!

    If it comes to it, report him to your local health authority and change GPs!

Reply
  • I failed the WCA with zero points too!

    It doesn't automatically mean you'll never ever get on ESA, it just means you have to be more persistent.

    Also the criteria have changed very recently (within the last year or so) specifically to take more account of Asperger's and other Autistic Spectrum Disorders!

    Go for the diagnostic assesment, and if you do get diagnosed as being on the spectrum, try again.

    And insist that your GP writes sick notes - he has a legal duty to do what's best for your health, both mental and physical, and if the DWP take away your benefits because he refuses to write sick notes when that's what's expected of him by the DWP when you're applying for ESA, then he has failed in that duty!

    If it comes to it, report him to your local health authority and change GPs!

Children
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