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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Northern Ireland - Social Security and Child Support Commissioners' Decisions >> [1999] NISSCSC C8/99(IB) (27 January 2000) URL: http://www.bailii.org/nie/cases/NISSCSC/1999/C8_99(IB).html Cite as: [1999] NISSCSC C8/99(IB) |
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[1999] NISSCSC C8/99(IB) (27 January 2000)
Decision No: C8/99(IB)
That the Tribunal had based its assessment on incomplete evidence. In support of this claimant submitted a medical report of 26 October 1998 which had not been before the Tribunal.
"A person who does not satisfy the all work test shall be treated
as incapable of work if any of the circumstances set out in
paragraph (2) apply to him.
(2) The circumstances are that -
(a) he is suffering from a severe life threatening disease in
relation to which -
(i) there is medical evidence that the disease
is uncontrollable, or uncontrolled, by a
recognised therapeutic procedure, and
(ii) in the case of the disease which is uncontrolled,
there is a reasonable cause for it not to be controlled
by a recognised therapeutic procedure, and
(b) he suffers from a previously undiagnosed potentially life
threatening condition which has been discovered during the
course of the medical examination carried out for the purposes
of the all work test by a doctor approved by the Department".
"... a severe life threatening disease which is uncontrolled or
uncontrollable by a recognised therapeutic procedure. Where the
disease is uncontrolled there is reasonable cause for it not to be
controlled by a recognised therapeutic procedure".
In the box beneath this the doctor had indicated that there was a possibility that the anxiety state and severe episodes of diarrhoea which were not controlled might be caused by a rare adrenal tumour which needed to be excluded. The Adjudication Officer had before the hearing very properly sought further medical advice on this matter and there was evidence which it appears was before the Tribunal that a Medical Officer in the Department had contacted the claimant's GP and the GP confirmed that the client's blood pressure had been within normal limits when measured recently. Because the question of the rare adrenal tumour had been raised to the GP he would probably organise additional ultra sound scans for the sake of completeness. However the GP acknowledged that the probability of the condition existing was very low. That disease has now fortunately been excluded. The exclusion was not, however, known to the Tribunal at the time when it reached its decision.
"Claimant suffers from chronic anxiety which to some degree affects
his interaction with people especially in strange or new situations.
He has no physical limitations.
While he has sometimes a frequent a need to go to the toilet this
seems to be limited to times when he is going out and it would seem
also to relate to a state of mind rather than a physical problem."
Under the heading "Reasons for Decision" the Tribunal has stated:-
"The medical evidence plus claimant's own evidence would
indicate no physical problems..."
Mr McAvoy submitted that this was not correct in that the medical evidence (medical certificate dated 9 February 1998) showed that the claimant suffered from irritable bowel syndrome. On the evidence the Tribunal may have had open to it its conclusion that any problem with continence did not come from the claimant's physical condition. However, it has found that he had no physical problems. This was a conclusion which was not open to it on the evidence. The claimant's GP, the examining doctor and the claimant all supplied evidence to the effect that the claimant suffered from irritable bowel syndrome. I cannot be satisfied that this unjustified finding did not influence the Tribunal's eventual conclusion on the activity of continence.
(Signed): M F Brown
COMMISSIONER
27 January 2000