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its the new government tests that allow you to be classed as disabled are very stringent and many are being told they are no longer disabled under the new rules....i was refering to.
Not sure why YOU assumed those are my sentiments, not sure why you lay the blame with me nor why you d wish your ills on myself but one things for sure there seems to be a lot of this poor interpretation and judgement of posts recently...and reading far too much into them...
I did not display personal opinion in my post and expected an understanding of that rather than recieve an unbalenced soap box rant.... Does it stop you comunicating and reasoning in a mature manner ?
considdering how severe the new rules to qualify as disabled are, i think the assessor would suggest if you can shop "you are not disabled"....
correct me if i m wrong please...
The definition of ‘disability’ under the Equality Act 2010
In the Act, a person has a disability if:
they have a physical or mental impairment
the impairment has a substantial and long-term adverse effect on their ability to perform normal day-to-day activities
For the purposes of the Act, these words have the following meanings:
'substantial' means more than minor or trivial
'long-term' means that the effect of the impairment has lasted or is likely to last for at least twelve months (there are special rules covering recurring or fluctuating conditions)
'normal day-to-day activities' include everyday things like eating, washing, walking and going shopping
People who have had a disability in the past that meets this definition are also protected by the Act.
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