Disability conditions for the mobility component
Lower rate mobility component
A child aged five or over can get the lower rate mobility component of DLA if they are ‘so severely disabled physically or mentally’ that they cannot use unfamiliar routes outdoors ‘without guidance or supervision from another person most of the time’.1s73(1)(d) SSCBA 1992; R(DLA) 6/03 The need for guidance or supervision must be substantially more than the usual needs of a child of the same age.2s73(4A) SSCBA 1992 ‘Guidance’ and ‘supervision’ can overlap. It is important to emphasise the full extent of a child’s needs without trying to fit them neatly into either category.
‘Guidance’ can mean physically leading or directing a child, or verbally giving instructions or encouragement. It can include helping to avoid obstacles or places that upset them, or leading or persuading a child when they become disorientated or are anxious.
‘Supervision’ can be precautionary. For example, it can be monitoring a child’s mental or emotional state in case they need more assistance to continue walking, or monitoring the route ahead for places or situations which might upset them. Supervision can also be active, such as encouraging or cajoling a child, or distracting them from fears3R(DLA) 3/04 or possibly alarming situations.4CDLA/42/1994 Unlike the ‘continual supervision’ condition for the DLA care component (see here), the child does not need to require supervision to prevent ‘substantial danger’.5CDLA/42/1994 If they get the care component because they require continual supervision, they may also get the lower rate mobility component, but this is not automatic.6CDLA/42/1994; CDLA/3360/1995; CSDLA/591/1997; CDLA/2643/1998; R(DLA) 4/01 It is enough that supervision helps, even if it does not remove risks completely or if a child may not always respond well to the person providing it.7IN v SSWP (DLA) [2013] UKUT 249 (AAC); R(DLA) 4/01; R(DLA) 6/05 If a child’s mental health problem means that they need somebody to come with them to overcome a fear of going outside, they are likely to satisfy the ‘guidance or supervision’ requirement.8CDLA/42/1994; R(DLA) 3/04 If they can just manage a walk into their garden, this could be enough to qualify.9CDLA/2142/2005 If no amount of reassurance can persuade them to go outside, it is possible that they may not qualify.10CDLA/2364/1995; KH v SSWP (DLA) [2015] UKUT 8 (AAC), but see CDLA/42/1994 Higher rate mobility component
A child aged three or over can get the higher rate mobility component if:11s73 SSCBA 1992; reg 12(1)(b) SS(DLA) Regs •they have a disability from a physical cause that means they are unable, or virtually unable, to walk; or
•they are both blind and deaf; or
•they are blind or severely visually impaired; or
•they were born without feet or are a double amputee; or
•they have a ‘severe mental impairment’ (ie, arrested or incomplete development of the brain which results in severe impairment of intelligence and social functioning), have ‘severe behavioural problems’ and qualify for the highest rate of DLA care component.12JH v SSWP (DLA) [2010] UKUT 456 (AAC); AH v SSWP (DLA) [2012] UKUT 387 (AAC); SSWP v MG (DLA) [2012] UKUT 429 (AAC) This definition is unlikely to apply to children whose only disability or health condition is a mental health problem, but can apply to children with mental health symptoms who also have a developmental condition or autism.
’Unable or virtually unable to walk’
To get the higher rate mobility component on the basis of walking difficulties, those difficulties must have a physical cause.13Reg 12(1)(a) SS(DLA) Regs; KS v SSWP (DLA) [2013] UKUT 390 (AAC) This does not mean that this category is always irrelevant for children with mental health problems. For example, if a child’s walking is impaired by physical weakness due to anorexia , the cause is physical and they can meet this criterion.14CDLA/1525/2008 ‘Benefit from enhanced facilities for locomotion’.
On top of the criteria above, to get the DLA mobility component, a child must be able to ‘benefit from enhanced facilities for locomotion’. That means they must be able to make outdoor journeys from time to time.15CM/5/1986; BP v SSWP [2009] UKUT 90 (AAC) It is not essential that they are interested in or enjoy going out, provided that it would be beneficial for them to do so. Example
George (15) has severe depression. For George, this means that he does not enjoy the things he used to and feels very low most of the time. He has no energy or enthusiasm for day-to-day activities, does not have much appetite, and sleeps poorly. For the last three months, George has been unable to go to school because of his condition. George self-harms and has recently been telling his mother that he is having suicidal thoughts.
George needs substantially more help than another 15-year-old without his condition. The attention he needs in the daytime includes encouragement to wash, change clothes, eat, take medication, and communicate with professionals. He also needs continual supervision throughout the day to minimise the risk of him self-harming or acting on suicidal thoughts. George’s needs are likely to satisfy one or both of the daytime care conditions (he only ‘needs’ to satisfy one).
George is often awake until 1 or 2am because he struggles to get to sleep and this is a time when he has particularly difficult thoughts and feelings. His mother regularly spends two hours or more after 11pm comforting and reassuring George to help him to get to sleep. During this time she is also watching over him to minimise the risk that he might harm himself. George’s needs are likely to satisfy one or both of the night-time care conditions (he only ‘needs’ to satisfy one).
Based on his daytime and night-time needs, George should be awarded the highest rate of the care component of DLA.
George’s needs are also likely to satisfy the requirements for the lower rate of the mobility component of DLA. He rarely leaves the house, except to go to medical appointments with his mother. It is unlikely that he could go out without guidance or supervision from another person because of his need for verbal reassurance, encouragement and comforting, as well as the need for supervision to minimise the risk that he will hurt himself or act on suicidal thoughts.
George will not be awarded the higher rate of the mobility component of DLA because he does not have any difficulty with the physical act of walking or with his sight, has both feet, and does not have, for example, a developmental condition or autism.