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Northern Ireland - Social Security and Child Support Commissioners' Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Northern Ireland - Social Security and Child Support Commissioners' Decisions >> [2007] NISSCSC C16_06_07(DLA) (29 January 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/nie/cases/NISSCSC/2007/C16_06_07(DLA).html Cite as: [2007] NISSCSC C16_6_7(DLA), [2007] NISSCSC C16_06_07(DLA) |
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[2007] NISSCSC C16_06_07(DLA) (29 January 2007)
Decision No: C16/06-07(DLA)
"Many thanks for referring this 18 year old girl who was born with congenital atresia of her right ear. Her left ear is normal as is the hearing on the left side. The hearing on the right side shows a mixed hearing loss averaging 80dB. This is not amenable to surgery.
She will have 3 problems throughout life:
1) Difficulty in understanding speech on the bad side, namely the right side.
2) Difficulty in understanding speech in a group situation.
3) Difficulty in localisation of sounds.
She is to start her university course in September 2005 at [the city is named] in England where she will study animal behaviour.
An CAT scan of her petrous bones performed at the Royal Victoria Hospital on the 10 March 2005 confirms a normal left ear with atresia of the right ear canal involving the middle ear.
I would be most grateful if her tutors at the university would be aware of the above hearing problem.
She is not a suitable candidate for a hearing aid but would be helped by a (1) a note-taker or (2) if she could receive permission to record lectures."
The consultant concludes his letter by saying that he plans to review the claimant annually during her holidays.
"On the basis of the evidence before it, Tribunal feels that at the relevant date claimant was not so severely disabled physically or mentally as to require either: throughout the day frequent attention in connection with bodily functions, or continual supervision to avoid substantial danger, or during the night prolonged or repeated attention in connection with bodily functions, or another person to be awake for a prolonged period or at frequent intervals to watch over her, nor would she be unable to prepare a cooked main meal for herself.
Tribunal accepts the genuine existence of Claimant's hearing problem. However, to qualify for Disability Living Allowance a Claimant must come within the statutory provisions and Tribunal concluded that in the absence of a requirement for frequent attention or continual supervision from another person Claimant did not so qualify. So far as preparation of a meal for herself is concerned, Tribunal was of the view that Claimant should be able to watch things boiling and that she should be aware of the time which an item would take to prepare. It could not accept that lack of hearing in one ear should be a barrier to preparation of a meal for one person."
(signed): J P Powell
Deputy Commissioner
29 January 2007