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More concerns about the current UK Welfare Reform

Daisymay

Senior Member
Messages
754
This is being posted on behalf of Margaret Williams. Permission to repost.



http://www.meactionuk.org.uk/More-concerns.htm



More concerns about the current UK Welfare Reform


Margaret Williams 22nd January 2012


Attention is drawn to a letter recently sent to two high-profile members of The House of Lords by Douglas Fraser, a former professional violinist but now severely affected by ME/CFS (http://www.meactionuk.org.uk/FraserToTGTandMM.htm).

In it, Fraser sets out his concerns about a paper circulated by Lord (David) Freud, Parliamentary Under Secretary of State (Minister for Welfare Reform) to certain members of the House of Lords (this being Models of Sickness and Disability by Waddell G and Aylward M, whose track record on the alleged deviance of sick people -- those with ME/CFS being specifically targeted -- is documented in Magical Medicine: how to make a disease disappear by Professor Malcolm Hooper available at www.meactionuk.org.uk/magical-medicine.htm).

David Freuds history is interesting: he previously worked as a journalist for the Financial Times and then joined a leading UK investment bank (UBS investment banking), where he was on record as saying to his deputy: If the rest of the country knew what we were being paid, there would be tumbrels on the streets and heads carried round on pikes. In his city career he frequently got things seriously wrong. As one reviewer of his book put it, Freud will be remembered in the City as one of the key players in several of the most embarrassing and badly managed deals in investment banking. His revenue forecasts were, in his own words: completely potty; according to the Daily Telegraph, his financial plans for Euro Disney went so goofy they almost wrecked his career and on the Channel Tunnel Rail Link he got his sums wrong by 1.2 billion and had to be bailed out by the Government (www.variant.org.uk/events/Doc7Poverty/BankerBankies.pdf ).

Nonetheless, as the To Banker from Bankies 2009 report (which was supported and funded by Oxfam) states, in 2007 Freud was appointed as the key Government advisor on welfare reform by Labours John Hutton, having been commissioned to produce a report Reducing Dependency, Increasing Opportunity on the Welfare to Work programme. This was despite the fact that, in his own words, Freud didnt know anything about welfare at all (Daily Telegraph, 4th February 2008). Despite the great complexity of the welfare system, Freud researched and wrote his welfare shake-up plan in just three weeks. It recommended that the existing role of private firms (such as the French company Atos) in the Governments Welfare to Work programme be dramatically increased; he acknowledged that there was no evidence to suggest that private contractors were any better than the Department for Work and Pensions, but he still concluded that it would be economically rational to pay them tens of thousands of pounds for every person they removed from benefits.

The Daily Telegraph subsequently reported that Freud himself had severed all ties with Labour Ministers and was joining the Conservatives Work and Pensions team after being put forward for a peerage.

In May 2010 the Coalition Prime Minister (David Cameron) appointed him to his current post as Minister for Welfare Reform.

On 17th January 2012 Hansard recorded that Lord Freud referred to the Models of Sickness and Disability document that he had handed round to some members of the House of Lords(http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/ld201212/ldhansrd/text/120117-0001.htm), this being the document which will apparently underpin the transition from Disabled Living Allowance (DLA) to the Personal Independence Payment (PIP) and from which document it is clear that the biopsychosocial construct now permeates medical assessments for state benefits (so it may come as no surprise that Professor Peter White is acknowledged as an advisor).

Lord Freud explained: I am hopeful that PIP will do a better job than DLA.I shall now turn to the more technical aspects of this issue that is, looking at what we are doing with the PIP and its assessment. Is it a medical assessment? It absolutely is not.

Our approach is and this is rather a mouthful akin to the biopsychosocial model

I sent round a rather interesting piece of analysis to many noble Lords in the Committee, called Models of Sickness and Disability, which showed the differences between the models, explaining the medical model, the reaction of the social model against the pure medical model and the synthesis of the biopsychosocial model. The summary of the biopsychosocial model in the analysis is that: Sickness and disability are best overcome by an appropriate combination of healthcare, rehabilitation, personal effort and social/work adjustments. There is a coherent theory behind this assessment.

There are about 170 references to models scattered throughout the 40 page document and Fraser points out that readers may get the impression when it comes to the biopsychosocial model that a rigorous and scientific approach has been taken, yet it may be argued that there is no coherent theory whatsoever behind that model.

Fraser draws attention to the authors footnotes, which are rife with selective referencing and contain misquotations from and misrepresentations of the (not easily available) cited source.

In one instance the authors seem to infer (from their cited source) that it has been shown to be perfectly legitimate to proceed directly from biopsychosocial theory (or the conceptual model) to biopsychosocial practice and policy, when the cited author in fact concluded that the biopsychosocial model is hardly a theory and certainly not a model.

The central arguments surrounding issues of bias and confounding in relation to the biopsychosocial model that are exposed within the cited source are not -- as they should have been -- made known by Waddell and Aylward.

Notably, the impression from the footnotes is that it was Professor Peter White who provided classic examples on how the biopsychosocial model is not an aetiological model of disease, and (how) arguments about whether the cause of a particular disease is biological or psychosocial obscure the main issue, when in reality it was George Davey-Smith, Professor of Clinical Epidemiology at the University of Bristol who urged caution and who carried the torch for intellectual integrity: it was he who showed that bias can generate spurious findings and that when interventional studies to examine the efficacy of a psychosocial approach have been used, the results have been disappointing, and he who pointed out that cholera was attributed to moral factors and that peptic ulcer was attributed to stress before the appliance of science (Proof Positive? Eileen Marshall & Margaret Williams, 30th August 2005http://www.meactionuk.org.uk/PROOF_POSITIVE.htm).

According to Waddell and Aylward (and White), both these examples are of specific diseases of doubtful relevance to common health problems and they are dismissed because they appear to threaten the biopsychosocial philosophy, which Waddell and Aylward claim applies to any illness.

However, when one examines Waddell and Aylwards claim of supporting evidence for the biopsychosocial model in the management of low back pain (extensive scientific evidence that the biopsychosocial model provides the best framework for the modern management of low back pain), one finds from the latest Cochrane meta-analysis examining the results of behavioural interventions for low back pain that: the risk of bias of the trials included in this review was generally high and, in relation to the addition of behavioural therapy to in-patient rehabilitation over the longer term, that: there was only low or very low quality evidence, which was based on the results of only two or three small trials (Behavioural treatment for chronic low-back pain; 7 JUL 2010. The Cochrane Collaboration.
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/14651858.CD002014.pub3/full ).

Such seeming sleight of hand by Waddell and Aylward in seriously misleading a Government Minister and members of the House of Lords is to be deplored.

When it comes to ME/CFS, over 20 renowned international experts on ME/CFS have provided written statements of concern effectively stating that cognitive behavioural therapy and graded exercise therapy used to support the alleged existence of the biopsychosocial model do not work for people with ME/CFS (Magical Medicine pp 88-92).

Furthermore, numerous trials have shown that not only is the biopsychosocial model unsuccessful in the management of ME/CFS but that the model itself is not evidence-based and it may be actively harmful:

(i) the evidence that behavioural modification techniques have no role in the management of ME/CFS is already significant and has been confirmed by a study in Spain, which found that in ME/CFS patients, the two interventions used to justify the biopsychosocial model (CBT and GET) did not improve HRQL (health-related quality of life) scores at 12 months post-intervention and in fact resulted in worse physical function and bodily pain scores in the intervention group (Nunez M et al; Health-related quality of life in patients with chronic fatigue syndrome: group cognitive behavioural therapy and graded exercise versus usual treatment. A randomised controlled trial with 1 year follow-up. Clin Rheumatol 2011, Jan 15: Epub ahead of print)

(ii) Notwithstanding the medical pathogenesis of ME/CFS, the (bio)psychosocial model is adopted by many governmental organizations and medical professionals to legitimize the combination of Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) and Graded Exercise Therapy (GET) for ME/CFS. Justified by this model CBT and GET aim at eliminating presumed psychogenic and socially induced maintaining factors and reversing deconditioning, respectively. In this review we invalidate the (bio)psychosocial model for ME/CFS and demonstrate that the success claim for CBT/GET to treat ME/CFS is unjust. CBT/ GET is not only hardly more effective than non-interventions or standard medical care, but many patients report that the therapy had affected them adversely, the majority of them even reporting substantial deterioration. We conclude that it is unethical to treat patients with ME/CFS with ineffective, non-evidence-based and potentially harmful rehabilitation therapies such as CBT/GET (A Review on Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT) and Graded Exercise Therapy (GET) in Myalgic Encephalomyelitis (ME) / Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (CFS). Neuroendocrinol Lett 2009:30(3):284-299)

(iii) The Wessely Schools much-vaunted FINE (Fatigue Intervention by Nurses Evaluation) Trial could not by any standards be judged to have been successful: the results showed that pragmatic rehabilitation (PR, based on CBT/GET) was minimally effective in reducing fatigue and improving sleep only whilst participants were engaged in the programme and that there was no statistically significant effect at follow-up. Furthermore, pragmatic rehabilitation had no statistically significant effect on physical functioning; equally, its effect on depression had diminished at follow-up. Moreover the other intervention being tested (supportive listening or SL) had no effect in reducing fatigue, improving physical functioning, sleep or depression (AJ Wearden et al; BMC Medicine 2006, 4:9 doi:10.1186/1741-7015-4-9)

(iv) Equally, the widely acclaimed but statistically unsustainable PACE Trial cannot be said to have been successful since, uniquely, ratings that would qualify a potential participant as sufficiently impaired to enter the trial were considered within the normal range when recorded on completion of the trial and no recovery statistics have been published by the Chief Principal Investigator, Professor Peter White (Comparison of adaptive pacing therapy, cognitive behaviour therapy, graded exercise therapy, and specialist medical care for chronic fatigue syndrome (PACE): a randomised trial. PD White et al. Lancet 2011 Mar 5;377(9768):823-36).

It has not been possible to determine Lord Freuds awareness of the need to distinguish biomedical science from biopsychosocial ideology before he formulates Government policies that will have a profoundly detrimental impact on sick and frightened people whose means of survival is threatened if their state support is withdrawn.

The term biopsychosocial model is used almost exclusively by Wessely School psychiatrists to refer to disorders that they continue to regard as psychosomatic (especially ME/CFS) and it is not used by other disciplines. For example, cardiologists do not refer to patients as having a biopsychosocial disorder and oncologists do not refer to cancer as a biopsychosocial disorder, nor do they claim that their patients must be coerced back to work by the withdrawal of their state benefits because it is patients aberrant belief that they are physically sick which maintains their disease.

The use of such a term can be seen as a linguistic misdirection by these psychiatrists, allowing them to conceal their belief that ME/CFS is not a physical disease but an aberrant state of mind maintained by psychological and behavioural factors (ie. the psychosocial components of biopsychosocial). The only bio in their biopsychosocial model is their reluctant concession that ME/CFS is sometimes preceded by a self-limiting viral infection (and, despite the overwhelming international evidence to the contrary, they insist it is maintained by psychosocial elements that do not result from any organic pathology).

As Fraser states: As the tortured arguments continue, one suspects that the authors (Waddell and Aylward) are keenly trying to ensure something is kept out of public view.Had Lord Freud said We have not gone for the medical model; we have gone for the psychosomatic model, I do not think that members of the House would have been impressed for a moment.

Informed readers of Models of Sickness and Disability might wonder why something that has been repeatedly shown not to be a successful model is being promoted by a UK Government.

As Fraser points out, an explanation may be found from a 2005 issue of Decision Makers Exchange (DME), the monthly newsletter for DLA and Attendance Allowance decision makers: Confirmation that Medical Services (ie. the DWP) have adopted the Biopsychosocial Model for assessing not just claims based on incapacity for work but also DLA and AA came in the July edition of Decision Makers ExchangeAn item explained that Medical Services have recently introduced a change in the way that they assess a customers disabilities and the effect it has on their lives. The Biopsychosocial Model aims to address how a persons disability has an effect on that individuals life. The newsletter features an article by Mansel Aylward, former Chief Scientist at the DWP, entitled Professor Aylward endorses the Biopsychosocial Model of Disability.Conditions for which there is limited or no recognised pathological basis, such as chronic fatigue, fibromyalgiafeature regularly in disability assessments for state benefits.The Biopsychosocial Model is the answer to the disability analysts plight.

Fraser then quotes from an Atos Origin Medical Services meeting in 2004 which sets out just how the dogma that underpins the biopsychosocial model is being authoritatively promulgated, and he notes the convenient fictions and lack of logic those responsible wouldrefuse to tolerate if applied to their own family and friends.

The Atos Origin 2004 Conference report is explicit: Psychosocial factorsare at least as important as physical factors in the onset and maintenance of these conditions. Patients can make a number of secondary gains with these unexplained illnesses, such asturning a socially unacceptable disability into a more acceptable organic disability caused by injury or disease beyond their control. They can blame their failures on the illness; elicit care, sympathy and concern from family and friends; avoid work or even sex; and there are financial rewards associated with disability.

if a patient believes their illness was caused by a virus and theres nothing they can do about it, their prognosis is not likely to be positive. But if the patient believesthat the symptoms wont last long and they have control over them, then the prognosis will be better. We need patients to understand their situation, so they are more likely to go back to work (http://www.meactionuk.org.uk/AtosConference2004.pdf).

Fraser concludes in his letter: Given the combined forces of what appears as an unseen (and) corporate-generated self-serving attitude (tacitly approved by Models of Sickness and Disability authors as perfectly moral) in the guise of thepsychosomatic modelpromoting the prejudice ofpop-psychology directed at vulnerable and relatively powerless othersand a profit-driven foreign companyit is unsurprising that so many of the bad decisions they help facilitate are overturned on closer examination at costly appeals. It would of course, be much cheaper in the long run to adopt some of the higher standards of appeal tribunals in the first place.

This non-evidence-based but pervasive biopsychosocial ideology is now being foisted on the unsuspecting people of Australia and New Zealand, because in May 2010 Aylward wrote a report for the Australasian Faculty of Occupational and Environmental Health (Realising the Health Benefits of Work: A Position Paper. Professor Sir Mansel Aylward CB; Director: Centre for Psychosocial Research and Disability Research, Cardiff University (the Centre being funded by the health insurance company UNUM Provident). In it, Aylward asserts:

Fundamental Precepts:

Main determinants of health and illness depend more upon lifestyle, socio-cultural environment and psychological (personal) factors than they do on biological status and conventional healthcare
Work: most effective means to improve well-being of individuals, their families and their communities
Objective: rigorously tackling an individuals obstacles to a life in work.

Making the distinction: definitions and usage:

Disease: objective, medically diagnosed pathology
Illness: subjective feeling of being unwell
Sickness: social status accorded to the ill person by society


In that report Aylward claims that largely subjective complaints (such as ME/CFS) are often associated with psychosocial issues, not with pathology, and that bio-psycho-social factors may aggravate and perpetuate disability and that they may also act as obstacles to recovery and barriers to return to work. He refers to the UK Governments Pathways to Work initiative, with its mandatory work-focused interviews for sick people and the use of CBT to change peoples alleged misperceptions about their health; his message is: Barriers to recovery and return to (retention in) work are primarily personal, psychological and social rather than health-related medical problems and that Perceptions lie at the heart of the problem.

His report provides guidance on Engaging and Exploiting Stakeholders, which he says must include

changing the beliefs and attitudes of politicians, civil servants, health professionals, employers etc and changing the present culture about health and well-being in order to deliver visible hard outcomes.

Even more disturbingly, Aylwards report asserts that there must be new roles for health professionals, who must no longer permit their patients to believe that they are incapable of work if they have a disease but must instead propel them back into work even if they do have a legitimate medical disease. In the UK, there are recorded accounts of people with cancer being forced back to work and of a cancer sufferer dying whilst awaiting an appeal against a refusal of benefits by Atos.

Unsurprisingly, since he has invested so much into the promulgation of it, despite the accumulating evidence to the contrary, Aylward claims that the biopsychosocial principles of management are evidence-based, when the biopsychosocial model can be readily shown to have no empirical foundation, particularly in relation to ME/CFS.

It has nevertheless been used to justify beliefs and policies, for example, in his letter to the two members of the House of Lords, Douglas Fraser quotes the following:

"Benefits and Work has seen one recent medical report in which a DWP doctor explicitly stated that he had used the Biopsychosocial model. The claimant has Chronic Fatigue Syndrome and was seeking renewal of an award of the middle rate of the care component and the higher rate of the mobility component. His condition had deteriorated since his last award over two and a half years ago. The doctor who visited him recorded that: There are few significant findings other than subjective tenderness and stiffness. But the customer is clearly living the life of a disabled person and I have applied the Biopsychosocial model. The doctor then stated, without explaining how the conclusion had been reached, that the claimants condition was just 40% physical and 60% psychosocial. This allowed the decision maker to conclude that the claimants award of higher rate mobility was no longer appropriate as the primary reason for his virtual inability to walk was psychosocial rather than physical".

The specific numbers given (40/60 split) provided a superficial appearance of scientific objectivity to cover what was in fact no more than a highly-prejudiced guess, because such things cannot be measured or quantified, but they achieved the required outcome (which was to strip this person of his benefits and for which the company to which the DWP has delegated its medical assessments would receive a handsome financial reward).

It is, of course, imperative to seek out and remove from state benefits the cheats and idle lead-swingers, but it is even more imperative to take appropriate medical care of the sick, yet what underpins current Government welfare reform is the un-evidenced conviction that work is always good for people, no matter how ill they may be.

Commenting on a response to her article Illness as Deviance, Work as Glittering Salvation and the Psyching-up of the Medical Model: Strategies for Getting the Sick Back to Work (http://www.democraticgreensocialist.org/wordpress/?page_id=1716), Gill Thorburn says: I was appalled to discover what they have been doing to the ME community for so many years. Its nothing short of legitimised abuse. The one discouraging thing Ive experienced in all my research so far has been discovering for how many years how much authentic evidence has been simply disregarded by those in power in favour of this spurious psychological approach. Some of the accounts on the net are simply heartbreaking, and it beggars belief that these people should have been allowed to continue with their methods and theories. As someone pointed out recently, they intervene in peoples lives with impunity, disregarding their negative effects, for which they are never held to account.

A UK Government is democratically elected to look after the best interests of the nation and of its citizens, not to abuse and persecute the sick in favour of foreign corporate profits by imposing the biopsychosocial model that is promoted by UK psychiatrists who have vested financial interests in such a model because they work for the health insurance industry, whose profits benefit from its use.
 

SilverbladeTE

Senior Member
Messages
3,043
Location
Somewhere near Glasgow, Scotland
This is more evidence of the vile web of corruption that perverts the UK's systems at high level.
many countries are beset by loathsome, nepotistic corruption, which causes immense harm, but in UK, it's been taken to an art form!

X went to Eton With B, married C, C is B's cousin, C sit son five different committees/Quangoes so her husband and cousin aren't seen as being invovled, but A and B both have financial/personal ties to the areas C oversees...
and so on and so forth.
See also "the Old School Tie" crap

Thus, you end up with sons of bitches who've been born with the proverbial-spoon-in-the-mouth, or are sociopathic scum who'd sell their granny to the knackersyard for a shilling, selling their services to any group of ratfinks in high power who want "troubles removed" by having them bullshitted to death
they act as "enablers" as I have said, like the Weasels, same thing.
They don't careif they are fuill of crap, wrong, dangerous, long as money is saved, crime shidenn or whatever, it's ok

Reminds me a lot of the freaks Stalin often put in power (when dealing with engineering/science etc), and the havoc they caused by accidents or simply derialing research, civil projects or terrible hardship or death to communities their mad/inept policies caused.

One of my faves and a major player in this, is Ian Duncan Smith, who'se been put in charge of the Department of Works & pensions (disability welafre is under his purvue)
Read up on him, read up on what he has said.
He claims "experience of real life form military service"...he was such a useless twat the IRA didn't even bother to put him on a hit list, lol!! :p
I am also distrubed by his serving in the then Rhodesia, heard lot of bad stuff about that era and practices.

anway to show you the kind of ratfink bastards who now run the UK...

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/pol...-less-than-minimum-wage-Tory-MP-suggests.html

Disabled should work for less than minimum wage, Tory MP suggests

People with disabilities should be paid less than the minimum wage, a Conservative MP suggested yesterday, prompting angry criticism from rights campaigners.


Philip Davies, the MP for Shipley, claimed the disabled or those with mental health problems were at a disadvantage because they could not offer to work for less money.


Relaxing the law would help some to compete more effectively for jobs in the real world in which they are by definition less productive than those without disabilities, he claimed.


The remarks stunned MPs on all sides and forced Downing Street to distance the Prime Minister from Mr Davies. Charities and equality campaigners condemned the suggestion as outrageous. During a Parliamentary debate, Mr Davies told MPs that the minimum wage of 5.93 per hour meant disabled people who wanted to work found the door being closed in their face.


The people who are most disadvantaged by the national minimum wage are the most vulnerable in society, he said. My concern about it is it prevents those people from being given the opportunity to get the first rung on the employment ladder.


He said that, during a visit to the charity Mind, he had spoken to people with mental health problems who viewed it as inevitable that someone without such difficulties would be offered a job ahead of them.



Related Articles

Philip Davies's comments are another obstacle to disabled workers being treated as equal
18 Jun 2011


Sophie Corlett, of Mind, described Mr Daviess suggestion as preposterous. People with mental health problems should not be considered a source of cheap labour and should be paid appropriately for the jobs they do, she said.

Dame Anne Begg, the Labour MP who heads the Commons work and pensions committee and uses a wheelchair, said Mr Daviess remarks were outrageous and unacceptable.

A Downing Street spokesman added: The Government would reject any suggestion for disabled people to be able to opt out of the national minimum wage. The aim of the national minimum wage is to establish fairness in the workplace and one of its key principles is to protect the most vulnerable workers.

The MP was warned that he would be questioned over the remarks by the Equality and Human Rights Commission.

A commission spokesman asked: Is he arguing that Richard Branson, by definition, is less productive than people who dont have dyslexia? Or that Winston Churchill was unfit to run the country because of his depression?

Mr Davies appeared unrepentant, however, blaming criticism running on the Twitter microblogging website on Left-wing hysteria. He later told BBC Radio 4 that

he only got criticised because he exposed the TRUE evil behind the Tories, and alas, much of Labort and the Liberal-Democrats too, nowadays :/

again, not about left or Right, like it or not, Right attracts more sociopaths, Left attracts more "control freaks", simple fact of life and basicc psychology. But most folk invovled are decent. many serve to do good, though that can be hard to believe at times, lol.
Both can be good or bad, depending on many factors.
Alas, our systems are corrupted by long existance, massive corruption, ineptitude, rising elitism/cronyism, lack of real experience of life or consequences of harm and screw ups

some of the people in power have betrayed their nations,r epeatedly, not to to say, a foreign pwoer over military secrets, but to corporations and lobbyists, the things they have done are unbelievable.
Simplest example of basic corruption is the UK "expenses scandal", but there's far worse.
I may loathe the way military are used by scumbag politicians, but the massive defence cuts and screw ups are heinous.
Empowering corporations, favouring them, letting them evade tax, get unfair advantage, screw consumers, evade monopoly limitations etc....
worst monsters EVER.
Least terrorists crimes are obvious and repellant and thus folk work against them, but htey are "midge bites" compared to all this from "power & money" :(