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Anyone receiving DLA (PIP) for type 1 diabetes

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This thread is now closed. Please contact Anna DUK, Ieva DUK or everydayupsanddowns if you would like it re-opened.
I get dla at higher rate for both care and mobility, you really have to not be able to walk very far at all for the mobility part and have access to 24 hour care for the care part.
I believe for DLA The distance you could walk was 50m and with PIP its going down to 20m so if you can walk more than 20m without stopping and do this everyday and work out 4 times a day, then I'm afraid you wont get it.
 
"I wasn't allowed to keep hypo treatment on my when I worked at the cinema, but they also wouldn't let me leave my post to get hypo treatment. So that caused problems."
Amberzak, I am incredulous. What business is it of anyone if an insulin user keeps glucose tablets in their pocket and then discretely eats them if they feel hypo
 
Hi, my son gets PIP but this is because he has learning disabilities and is deaf and therefore needs personal care and although he can walk a long way, he would have no idea where he was and would be a danger crossing the road. The diabetes part of it (although we got a few points for him needing constant care with this) only gave us a small number of points and even without them we would have been eligible.
 
Hello everyone,

After 26 years of being a type 1 diabetic I finally tried to claim PIP the new form of DLA.

I have been a well maintained diabetic and do my blood level checks 4 times daily before each injection altering my amount accordingly. I walk every day and work out five times daily to keep off the excess pounds insulin piles on you but they never tell you that,I drink socially once a week,vodka and diet coke and I try to keep to a healthy diet.

Fortunately I have no diabetic problems except recently from my last eye check I am going blind in my right eye with a cataract and I have some days up to 3 hypos even with my regiment. I find this exhausting. I also have spondulitus in my kneck ie extra bone growth and depression which I have suffered with for many years which my doctor says is normal when you live with a chronic illness.

According to PIP I do not deem ill enough to receive this benefit and I am wondering whether to put myself through a appeal. I live in Liverpool and the assessment was in Crewe!!!!!!! My separated partner took me.

Apparently because I can:
Prepare Food
Take Nutrition
Manage & monitor my condition
Manage going to the Toilet
Dress & undress myself
Communicate
Read & understand signs
Engage with people
Make budgeting decisions
Plan journeys
& finally Move Around
I do not qualify but on the assesement day I explained that I can do all those things but I cannot when I have my hypo attacks and the more I have the more it takes out of me and longer to recover sometimes needing to go to bed.

This has only made my depression worse. My husband of 25 years have recently asked to separate and I have no income and have not worked for last 3 years. What I do not understand is PIP is not means tested so you can work and I do want to find work yet is you fit the above criteria surely you would not be able to work!!!!!!!! I am dumb founded and frustrated.

Any advice or is there anyone else who has been able to receive DLA (PIP)

Thank you
Elaine
Hi Elaine,
Unfortunately I think it's highly unlikely you'll receive PIP. I'm type 1, had my leg amputated last year and I get a tiny amount, and pretty soon that will be stopped as well.
Because you can do the things on your list normally you won't get any 'points' and therefore will struggle to meet the criteria. Being unable to do them when your hypo would not count as that is not your 'normal' state (their words not mine).
You can appeal of course and if still unhappy can see about a tribunal but the appeal requires 'new' evidence of something not taken into account originally.
I don't mean to be blunt but I've been through all this quite recently and it's extremely difficult to get anywhere with them.
I hope things work out though and you can get the hypos under control at least.
Rob
 
We have requested an appeal to an independent tribunal because we don't believe that the decision can be taken that on reaching the age of sixteen a child suddenly becomes fully responsible for managing their diabetes. The support and supervision from parents is probably required even more in most of the elements of the Daily Living component due to the changes they are going through as teenagers. It is also our belief that the Mobility component does not adequately consider the safety aspects involved with a teenage diabetic 'Going Out', requiring someone to be with them who understands what to do if they have a 'hypo'.
We hope to convince the Tribunal that the DWP have got it wrong and that sixteen year olds with type 1 diabetes cannot be totally independent/responsible. If they are expected to stay in some form of education until the age of eighteen and Child Benefit is received for them until eighteen and, moreover the NHS does not transfer them to Adult Diabetic Clinic until the age of nineteen, why does the DWP see them differently? To cut costs!

This won't be popular, but I couldn't disagree more with you.

The purpose of the PIP is to help ensure that additional costs incurred in living a normal life by someone with a disability don't cause them financial impairment.

I am struggling to see what additional genuine financial costs your child or you are incurring from them having diabetes. What additional costs are associated with them 'going out' accompanied by someone who knows what to do if they have a hypo? I'm assuming you don't pay for an additional carer to follow your child around and that you haven't had to quit your job to supervise them. I'm also a bit concerned that you don't seem to see this as your child's responsibility. At 16, your child should monitoring their own blood sugar entirely without further involvement from you, they should be adjusting their own doses, and they certainly should know how to deal with a hypo themselves.

I get that it's hard from a parent's perspective, but any older teenager with diabetes really should be up to speed on how this is their life and their responsibility in the same way it's their responsibility to know when to go to the toilet or when it's time to eat. That's not to say they will always be entirely independent (although my personal view is that any parent actively managing their child's diabetes care post-16 is likely to be inadvertently doing more harm than good), but the sooner they learn this lesson, the better. I think it's also a useful lesson to teach young adults with diabetes that they aren't an invalid, that they can stand on their own two feet just like anyone else their age, and that they are in control of their future.

It's worth also bearing in mind that every time someone claims PIP, there's less for someone else who may well have genuine impairment of independence.

I'm really sorry if this sounds harsh and isn't the support you're looking for. Unfortunately, I'm a great believer that the reason I successfully manage my diabetes very well today is precisely because I chose to take full responsibility at 14 (when I was diagnosed) and refused to see myself as a disabled person who needed help from anyone else - so I always take quite a strident view on the level of responsibility teenage T1s have for themselves.
 
I always take quite a strident view on the level of responsibility teenage T1s have for themselves.

You can take out the 'T1s' in that sentence - it still applies. Speaking as a person with 6 grandkids, one of whom is 5 so that's 5, one is 25 with a 6yo of her own (whose dad has custody (to everyone's relief) not her, because she's still totally irresponsible) and the others are still teens. A couple have been more sensible from an early age but it's hard to understand how they can belong to the same 2 families and have all been brought up more or less the same - ie sensibly in the main!
 
Status
This thread is now closed. Please contact Anna DUK, Ieva DUK or everydayupsanddowns if you would like it re-opened.
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