Treated as having limited capability for work
You are automatically treated as having limited capability for work for ESA in a number of circumstances.1Regs 20, 25, 26, 30, and 33 and 35 ESA Regs; regs 16, 21, 22 and 26 ESA Regs 2013; EI v SSWP (ESA) [2016] UKUT 397 (AAC) Many of these relate to physical health or pregnancy. The main circumstances relevant to your mental health are where: •you are an inpatient in hospital where you have been medically advised to stay for at least 24 hours, or are recovering from treatment as an inpatient (and the DWP is satisfied that your condition remains sufficiently serious), including if you are attending a residential programme of rehabilitation for drug or alcohol addiction;
•you get income-related ESA while in education under the rules on here – ie, because you are getting a qualifying disability benefit; •for new-style contributory ESA only, you get UC and have already been assessed as having limited capability for work for UC;
•you are applying for ESA and have provided a current medical certificate, but the WCA has not yet been carried out – ie, you are in the ‘assessment phase’. However, this does not apply if you are reclaiming ESA after having failed the WCA, unless your condition has significantly worsened or you have a new health condition;
•you are appealing against a decision that you have failed the WCA, and you have submitted a medical certificate. However, this will not apply if you were treated as failing the WCA because you failed to return the ESA50 questionnaire or failed to attend the medical. Unless your current claim for ESA was made before 30 March 2015, this rule only applies if this is the first time you have failed the WCA, or the first time since a previous decision that you satisfied it;
•you are reclaiming ESA and have provided a current medical certificate, after being treated as failing the WCA because you failed to return the ESA50 questionnaire or failed to attend the medical. You can get ESA while waiting for your assessment. However, this only applies if:
◦you have now returned the questionnaire; or
◦it is more than six months since the decision treating you as not having limited capability for work; or
◦your condition has significantly worsened; or
◦you have a new health condition.
Remember that the DWP has guidance about the steps it should take following a failure to return an ESA50 form (see here) or a failure to attend an assessment (see here). It should not always treat you as having failed the WCA as a result. Note: special rules might also mean you are found to have limited capability for work if, because of your health condition or disability, work poses a substantial risk to your health (see here). Examples
Evan has bipolar disorder. He applied for contributory ESA a few months ago but failed the WCA. He is now experiencing a significant depressive episode so he reclaims contributory ESA, supplying a medical certificate. The DWP accepts that Evan’s symptoms have significantly worsened, and so treats him as having limited capability for work and pays him ESA while a new WCA is arranged.
Dionne has a long-term mental health problem. She claims contributory ESA but does not return the ESA50 form. In spite of DWP policy (see here), she is treated as having failed the WCA and her ESA stops. Dionne is not aware of any right to challenge this decision, but reclaims contributory ESA two months later. She is not paid any ESA until she has completed and returned a new ESA50 form.