Doctors are charging sick and disabled people up to £130 for medical
evidence to appeal decisions about their fitness to work, The
Independent has learnt. NHS GPs are telling patients they will only provide the necessary
details to challenge controversial Work Capability Assessments if they
pay. Others are refusing to help at all.
Citizens Advice say in
many areas GPs are helping with an appeal only if patients pay a fee of
between £25 and £130. There are also reports from 15 of its centres that
family surgeries are refusing to provide evidence at all.
GPs who
refuse to help – or charge increasingly high fees – argue that writing
up medical evidence takes up time when they could be helping patients.
But
Gillian Guy, chief executive of Citizens Advice, said: “Charging sick
and disabled people more than £100 for medical evidence beggars belief.
This process is clearly failing.”
More on this story here.
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