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DLA Medical Refusal ?
- Bill
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A question has just arisen in my mind due to someone's comment I have just read on this site.
When at an ATOS DLA Medical, if you are asked/told to bend, squat, lay or whatever and you know you are unable to do this, if you simply say 'sorry I cant do that' will that be noted by the Examiner as a refusal to do as asked?
Sorry if this is a silly question but I am concerned after what I just read.
Many thanks
Bill
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- Jox
When i got a copy of the report it stated i had refused to all of those tasks.
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- Bill
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- Posts: 152
Thanks for your reply; I suspect that means that it counted against you then?
Cheers.
Bill
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- pata1
Hi,
A question has just arisen in my mind due to someone's comment I have just read on this site.
When at an ATOS DLA Medical, if you are asked/told to bend, squat, lay or whatever and you know you are unable to do this, if you simply say 'sorry I cant do that' will that be noted by the Examiner as a refusal to do as asked?
Sorry if this is a silly question but I am concerned after what I just read.
Many thanks
Bill
Hi Bill,
If you cannot bend, squat or carry out any movement the Atos Medical Examiner asks, then you cannot be classed as refusing to do so, just unable to do so.
Extract from Handbook for Medical Examiners, sadly no longer available as a download on the DWP website.......Unless of course anyone can give a new link ?
General Professional Standards expected of an approved doctor
Advice given by IB approved doctors is expected to be:
Fair and impartial, in accordance with the Department for Work and Pensions' Equal Opportunities policy
Medically correct
Complete, justified, and consistent
Expressed in terms readily understood by the District Office customer
Legible, where given in writing
Within the consensus of current medical opinion.
When carrying out examinations, the IB approved doctor is expected to:
Act in accordance with the Department for Work and Pensions' Equal Opportunities policy
Make the claimant welcome and feel at ease
Introduce him - or herself to the claimant
Be polite at all times
Encourage a person accompanying a claimant to be present during the examination if so desired by the claimant
Allow the claimant time to give their history, asking any questions in a non-adversarial manner
Explain the purpose of the examination
Explain what the examination entails
Carry out the examination gently to avoid any unnecessary discomfort to the claimant
Carry out a relevant examination to provide the information necessary for decision making on benefit entitlement
Answer questions posed by the claimant, without compromising the subsequent decision making process.
Hope this of some assurance.
Pat
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- originaldave
Bill wrote:
Hi,
A question has just arisen in my mind due to someone's comment I have just read on this site.
When at an ATOS DLA Medical, if you are asked/told to bend, squat, lay or whatever and you know you are unable to do this, if you simply say 'sorry I cant do that' will that be noted by the Examiner as a refusal to do as asked?
Sorry if this is a silly question but I am concerned after what I just read.
Many thanks
Bill
Hi Bill,
If you cannot bend, squat or carry out any movement the Atos Medical Examiner asks, then you cannot be classed as refusing to do so, just unable to do so.
Extract from Handbook for Medical Examiners, sadly no longer available as a download on the DWP website.......Unless of course anyone can give a new link ?
General Professional Standards expected of an approved doctor
Advice given by IB approved doctors is expected to be:
Fair and impartial, in accordance with the Department for Work and Pensions' Equal Opportunities policy
Medically correct
Complete, justified, and consistent
Expressed in terms readily understood by the District Office customer
Legible, where given in writing
Within the consensus of current medical opinion.
When carrying out examinations, the IB approved doctor is expected to:
Act in accordance with the Department for Work and Pensions' Equal Opportunities policy
Make the claimant welcome and feel at ease
Introduce him - or herself to the claimant
Be polite at all times
Encourage a person accompanying a claimant to be present during the examination if so desired by the claimant
Allow the claimant time to give their history, asking any questions in a non-adversarial manner
Explain the purpose of the examination
Explain what the examination entails
Carry out the examination gently to avoid any unnecessary discomfort to the claimant
Carry out a relevant examination to provide the information necessary for decision making on benefit entitlement
Answer questions posed by the claimant, without compromising the subsequent decision making process.
Hope this of some assurance.
Pat
is this it ?
www.dwp.gov.uk/docs/wca-handbook.pdf
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- pata1
That's the updated version. Will copy the URL to my archives.
Regards.
Pat
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