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Northern Ireland - Social Security and Child Support Commissioners' Decisions


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Cite as: [1995] NISSCSC C30-95(DLA)

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[1995] NISSCSC C30-95(DLA) (26 July 1995)


     

    Decision No: C30/95(DLA)

    RE: G… D... (CHILD)

    SOCIAL SECURITY ADMINISTRATION (NORTHERN IRELAND) ACT 1992

    SOCIAL SECURITY CONTRIBUTIONS AND BENEFITS

    (NORTHERN IRELAND) ACT 1992

    SOCIAL SECURITY (CONSEQUENTIAL PROVISIONS)

    (NORTHERN IRELAND) ACT 1992

    DISABILITY LIVING ALLOWANCE

    Application by the claimant for leave to appeal

    and appeal to the Social Security Commissioner

    on a question of law from the decision of the

    Omagh Disability Appeal Tribunal

    dated 25 April 1994

    DECISION OF THE SOCIAL SECURITY COMMISSIONER

  1. This is a late application made on behalf of G... D... a child now aged 14 years, for leave to appeal against the decision of a Disability Appeal Tribunal (DAT) which upheld the decision of an Adjudication Officer who reviewed a previous decision to award disability living allowance (DLA) at the lowest rate care component for 2 years and to withdraw the award.
  2. I arranged an oral hearing at which claimant was represented by Mr McL... and the Adjudication Officer was represented by Mr Shaw. At that hearing I accepted the late application for special reasons, granted leave to appeal and with the consent of both parties treated the application as the appeal. I allow the appeal for the reasons set out below.
  3. The facts are that this child when the application was made was 12 years old and suffered from severe asthma. In the application form of August 1993 his father said:-
  4. "G... needs a lot of supervision and attention during the day

    to make sure his condition does not get any worse. He is unable

    to do the things a normal child of his age can do. At night we

    are constantly awake either supervising, helping him or comforting

    him."

    The claim form was also signed by the child's GP in which he said:-

    "He suffers from unstable asthma with recurring chest infections,

    coughs and shortness of breath. Gets worse during exercise and needs

    help and supervision by his parents."

    In the medical report signed by the GP the doctor records that the child needs help administering his medication 4 times per day and once at night and concluded his report by saying:-

    "This child also suffers from allergic rhinitis - these episodes

    occur frequent and precipital-acute asthmatic attacks."

  5. After an Adjudication Officer decided to award the care component at the lower rate a letter was written asking the Adjudication Officer to review his decision. A different Adjudication Officer reviewed the decision and withdrew the benefit altogether. In the decision on review the Adjudication Officer recorded:-
  6. "My revised decision is that G... D... is not entitled to the

    care component of Disability Living Allowance from and including

    27 July 1993. This is because Mr D... states his son G... D...,

    aged 12, suffers from chronic asthma and becomes breathless after

    walking a short distance. He can walk approximately 75 yards in 4 to

    5 minutes. One to 3 days a week, G... requires help getting out

    of bed, getting washed, bathed and getting dressed. Help is also

    required getting out of a chair, walking around indoors and using

    the stairs. G... D... requires help with medication 3 times a

    day when using 2 inhalers and a nose spray. Assistance is required

    when going to bed, when undressing and getting into bed. He needs

    help when using inhalers once or twice at night, 4 to 5 nights a

    week. G... D... would bed wet 3 to 4 times a month and this would

    occur when his asthma is bad.

    His General Practitioner states G... D... suffers very severe

    asthma with periodic acute episodes which occur twice a month and

    normally last 20 to 25 minutes. Occasionally, symptoms would awaken

    him at night. The General Practitioner states G... can walk well.

    On examining all the evidence and facts of the case, I find that

    G... D..., aged 12, suffers severe asthma. In my opinion a child

    of 12 should be able to administer his own medication including an

    inhaler. He would suffer 2 attacks a month and each would last

    20 to 25 minutes. I would accept that during an attack he would

    require some help with personal care needs but the attack would only

    last for a very short length of time, ie 20-25 minutes. Therefore

    the amount of attention provided during these periods does not amount

    to frequent attention during the day or repeated or prolonged

    attention at night.

    Also, taking into consideration that G... would wet the bed 3 to

    4 times a month, again, I am not satisfied that this amounts to

    repeated or prolonged attention at night. Looking at his ability

    to walk, I would accept that his ability to walk during an attack

    would be quite limited but again, an asthma attack only lasts for

    20-25 minutes and I find that G... D... is able to walk most of

    the time without the onset of severe discomfort. His General

    Practitioner confirms that he walks well."

  7. The letter of appeal to the Disability Appeal Tribunal to which claimant appealed against that decision sets out:-
  8. "... During the night G... gets very little sleep; he can get

    very frightened and when he has an attack this gets worse. He has

    had three acute attacks in a month and he has to be very careful

    not to aggravate this condition. This is why he needs frequent

    attention throughout the day and night to help him deal with his

    condition and with bedwetting as this happens quite often.

    It is G...'s parents belief that their son's condition requires

    him to have constant supervision to prevent him from getting

    into difficulties that he is unable to cope with and that would

    cause further aggravation of his condition. This is why they

    would like to appeal the Adjudication Officer's decision."

  9. The Disability Appeal Tribunal in relation to the care component upheld the decision of the Adjudication Officer and recorded in their findings of fact:-
  10. "... Father and teacher help with inhalers but although this help

    is given the tribunal finds that this help is not necessarily

    required. ..."

    and gave reasons for dismissing the appeal as:-

    "Although Mr D... advises that he helps to get G... out of bed

    in the morning and to wash and dress him we do not accept that the

    child requires this help or that his coughing is so debilitating

    during the night time as to necessitate such assistance. Whilst

    this help may be required during an acute attack the acute attacks

    are not considered frequent as to necessitate frequent attention

    during the day time with bodily functions or prolonged or repeated

    attention with such functions by night. Neither is someone required

    to be awake for prolonged periods at night to avoid substantial

    danger or at frequent intervals. Given the child's age we are of the

    opinion that he should be able to self medicate and we can find no

    reason why he should not do so himself. We do not accept that he

    would get his inhalers mixed up. We do not accept that continual

    supervision is required by day time as G... can self medicate

    and use his inhalers and indeed he always has his inhalers with him.

    Even during an acute attack we believe that G... could use his

    inhalers and summon help if necessary. Attention is not required

    for a significant portion of the day with bodily functions. The

    attention G... may require is not substantially in excess of that

    required for a child of comparable years."

  11. At the hearing before me Mr McL... argued that the Tribunal did not give any or sufficient weight to Dr S…'s report nor did it give any consideration to the attention which the child required and received in connection with the fact that he panics at night and needs to be comforted. The only things which the Tribunal considered was whether or not he could use the medication himself.
  12. Mr Shaw began by apologising for the poor quality of the submission which was made to the DAT and said that it did not mention the lower rate at all. He said that the first Adjudication Officer who awarded the benefit accepted that the child had severe asthma and in fact no-one has disputed the fact that he has severe asthma. What the Tribunal did was to argue from the general to the particular by saying that a child of 12 should be able to administer his own medication, therefore this child must be able to do so. That is a completely false argument because it is wrong for them to say that they were of the opinion he should be able to self-medicate and they could see no reason for him not being able to do so. In fact it should have made a finding not what a child of 12 can do but what this particular child can do. He also argued that it only took into account the actual medication and not whether or not the child needed comforting and said that the Mallinson case would be relevant to this and accepted that Dr S… had said that the child needed help 4 times per day with his medication and could not understand why the Tribunal rejected, as it appeared to do, the evidence of Dr S….
  13. I accept that the Tribunal erred in arguing from the general to the particular. It made no findings in relation to this particular child but based its findings on what in its opinion contrary to what a child of 12 should be able to do. It rejected the medical evidence, which it is entitled to do but in doing so it is obliged to give a reason. It only said he should be able to self-medicate and said it could find no reason why he should not be able to do so.
  14. For that reason I am satisfied that the Tribunal erred in law. I therefore set the decision aside and refer the matter back to be reheard by a differently constituted Disability Appeal Tribunal.
  15. (Signed): C.C.G. McNally

    COMMISSIONER

    26 July 1995


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