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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Northern Ireland - Social Security and Child Support Commissioners' Decisions >> [2006] NISSCSC C5_06_07(DLA) (16 May 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/nie/cases/NISSCSC/2006/C5_06_07(DLA).html Cite as: [2006] NISSCSC C5_6_7(DLA), [2006] NISSCSC C5_06_07(DLA) |
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[2006] NISSCSC C5_06_07(DLA) (16 May 2006)
Decision No: C5/06-07(DLA)
(1) That the tribunal had failed to provide adequate reasons for its decision. Mr Hatton submitted that the tribunal did not address the issue of pain though this was obviously, from the claimant's general practitioner (GP) report, an important issue in the appeal. Mr Hatton submitted that the tribunal had not addressed the points set out in my decision C16/98(DLA) which he submitted set out a number of issues to consider in relation to pain. He submitted further that the tribunal had recorded what the evidence stated, referred to applicable case-law and then stated its conclusions. He submitted that the tribunal had given no explanation as to why it felt attention was not reasonably required nor why it felt it was reasonable to expect the claimant to perform listed tasks when she experienced discomfort as a result. As a result of this the claimant was left not knowing why her claim to benefit had failed and this was an error in law.
(2) The tribunal had reached a conclusion not based on the evidence before it and had drawn unreasonable inferences from the GP factual report. In this connection Mr Hatton referred particularly to question 7(a) on that report and the GP's responses thereto. Question 7(a) and the GP replies were as follows:
Replies
"What difficulty does the patient experience
Low back pain/leg pain
while walking on level ground with regards to:
(a) the maximum distance in metres/yards
that the patient could walk before the
onset of any severe discomfort and how
long would this take?
Not recorded"
As part of its reasoning the tribunal recorded:
"The Tribunal believes if the Appellant was virtually unable to walk most of the time and if the effort of walking was dangerous for her and if she had falls, it is reasonable to assume that her GP would have been made aware of this and [the GP] would have stated this in his report."
"Low back pain, leg pain, anxiety, feeling shaky."
"The appellant indicated in her self-assessment form dated 29 October 2004 that she had substantial care needs. She stated that she needed help to carry out the majority of her bodily functions. She also ticked that she required encouragement or reminding to carry out some of her bodily functions. She also stated that she could fall anywhere and that she would stumble quite a lot. The Appellant also referred to care needs in her letter of appeal and oral evidence.
The tribunal does not believe this evidence of care needs and finds that the Appellant does not satisfy the conditions of entitlement for the care component in light of the available medical evidence. The report from Dr [], General Practitioner (GP), dated 21 December 2004 listed the Appellant's medical conditions and stated that although in discomfort the Appellant could safely and unaided manage to carry out all the listed bodily functions. He stated that she had no recorded history of falls. Dr [] also stated that she was the main carer for her son. The Appellant confirmed in her self-assessment form that she did not need someone to keep an eye on her during the day and night.
The Medically Qualified Panel Member explained that there was no evidence found in the GP records that indicated that the Appellant had any care needs or that she had any falls. The x-ray of her lumbar spine dated 27 July 2002 stated that she had disc space narrowing at L5/S1, which may be a congenital anomaly with a transitional lumbo-sacral junction, but that there were no secondary degenerative changes. The report from Dr G…., Consultant Anaesthetist, dated 25 June 2004 stated that the Appellant complained of mechanical low back pain with a neuralgic-type feeling of restlessness in her legs. He stated that on examination she was tender over the low back. He recommended a trial of Tens and acupuncture and a low dose of gabapentin medication. The report from Sister H… dated 23 July 2004 stated that the Appellant failed to attend the Pain Clinic for the trial of Tens. The GP clinical record dated 27 July 2004 stated that the Appellant used the diazepam as a muscle relaxant when her period was present because that was when the back pain was worse. The Belfast City Hospital Accident and Emergency Department record dated 13 January 2005 stated that the Appellant attended complaining of difficulty micturating over the previous week but that she had no pain. The findings on examination were that she was mildly tender over the suprapubic but that she had normal power and tone of her lower limbs and reflexes and sensation were normal. A diagnosis of urinary tract infection was made and she was advised to increase her intake of fluids and discharged."
"… The tribunal believes if the Appellant was virtually unable to walk most of the time and if the effort of walking was dangerous for her and if she had falls, it is reasonable to assume that her GP would have been made aware of this and [the GP] would have stated this in his report. The Tribunal also believes that the use of a walking stick would reduce any risk of falls occurring. …
The Tribunal believes if the Appellant's mental or physical condition was such that it warranted a need for guidance or supervision when outdoors, it is reasonable to assume that her GP would have been made aware of this and [the GP] would have stated this in his report. The Tribunal also believes that the use of a walking stick would reduce any risk of falls occurring."
As regards the care component the tribunal states:
"The Tribunal believes that the Appellant overstated her disability. The Tribunal believes if the Appellant's physical or mental condition was such that she needed help or encouragement from another person to carry out her bodily functions plus the main meal tasks and if she had falls she would reasonably have been expected to have brought this to the attention of her GP and [the GP] would have stated this in his report."
"Low back pain/leg pain"
Asked if he was aware of any attention or supervision to enable his patient to get around on unfamiliar surroundings most of the time the GP replied, "Not recorded".
"It is perfectly reasonable for the tribunal to view the entirety of the evidence before it and to expect that a claimant would have mentioned severe problems to his GP. He has, after all, seen fit to mention them to the social security authorities in claiming benefit and it is only to be expected that if the problem is genuine it would be mentioned to his GP. I do not say that in any particular case a tribunal is bound to assume that an absence from the GP records means that a claimant's evidence is not credible but it is a factor which the tribunal is certainly entitled to take into consideration in assessing the credibility of evidence given to it. In CDLA/4580/2003 there was a misinterpretation of a GP's statement. In this case there was no misinterpretation of the records. The tribunal simply considered the fact that there was no mention of certain problems in the GP records as a factor in assessing the reliability of the claimant's evidence. This it was entitled to do."
(signed): M F Brown
Commissioner
16 May 2006