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To be shocked that over half a million people under the age of 35 are out of work due to long-term sickness

406 replies

puncheur · 24/12/2023 16:29

I had no idea. These numbers are extraordinary. 560k people between the ages of 16 and 34 economically inactive due to long term illness.
https://www.theguardian.com/society/2023/dec/24/500000-under-35s-out-of-work-long-term-illness-uk?CMP=Share_iOSApp_Other

More than 500,000 under-35s in UK out of work due to long-term illness

Experts link 44% increase in four years to a growing mental health crisis and underinvestment in health services

https://www.theguardian.com/society/2023/dec/24/500000-under-35s-out-of-work-long-term-illness-uk?CMP=Share_iOSApp_Other

OP posts:
Thread gallery
10
FlyingCherub · 24/12/2023 18:47

I've had a tough year - my Dad was diagnosed with cancer and I was plunged into a full time carer/care co-ordinator role, while working full time, running a house and looking after 2 spaniels with separation anxiety. When he died in January, I felt horribly physically unwell - couldn't sleep, couldn't stop shaking, no appetite, and my counsellor through the hospice Dad died in was very adamant that I should get signed off by my GP.

But going to work, having a routine and having to engage my brain with other things was exactly what I needed. The days I did spend at home on my own just made things even worse.

I think that people can live inside their own heads too much.

Octavia64 · 24/12/2023 18:47

I suspect that these numbers out of work will come down over time - anecdotally I know a lot of people who have taken breaks in their degree etc due to Long Covid so hopefully as people recover (and I know it will be a slow recovery) eventually they will be able to get back to normal life.

lostonmars · 24/12/2023 18:47

This reply has been deleted

Message deleted by MNHQ. Here's a link to our Talk Guidelines.

Don't you sound lovely. Have the Christmas you deserve.

YetMoreNewBeginnings · 24/12/2023 18:48

Sususudio · 24/12/2023 16:58

I also wonder if there has been a big reduction in the numbers of job opportunities for people with mental health issues and physical disabilities.

Surely not, given so many entirely WFH jobs

That’s what the government have said in their latest plans to slash reform disability benefits.

However, even the civil service have now got people coming back to the office more and companies like JCB (very close to the current government) have cut WFH

Entire WFH jobs are not as plentiful as they were last year

lostonmars · 24/12/2023 18:48

SALWARP2023 · 24/12/2023 18:27

I've had MH problems since 13. I have always worked in some capacity.

Congrats?

biscuitnut · 24/12/2023 18:49

This level of sick is unattainable and it’s not fair on the taxpayer. If there really are that many sick people then we are doing something very wrong as a society. I don’t believe it. I imagine there is a fair few taking the piss. I have one lives next to me. Fat lazy bastard lies in bed then sits in the garden smoking weed and shouting at his mother to meet his every need. Apparently he has ME. Funny it’s always one of his ‘good days’ when he wants to do something. I feel very sorry for genuinely sick people who have to jump through hoops because of the amount of chancers out there.

Ostryga · 24/12/2023 18:50

Ooh I’m a statistic! Well I’m back at work now, but in October 2022 I started having seizures out of the blue (previously very fit and healthy) and went from a higher tax bracket job to sick pay. What an eye opener that was.

My seizures are currently still uncontrolled, however I’m able to work from home quite safely so don’t need benefits anymore. But that was a very dark time, and it’s incredible how quickly you think you have it all, to it all coming crashing down.

I have PIP now (higher mobility and lower daily living) and that’s about £550 every 4 weeks which is used mostly for taxis when I have seizures out and about to get home with as obviously can’t drive anymore.

lostonmars · 24/12/2023 18:50

TigerRag · 24/12/2023 18:46

I looked recently and they're either (my area) pip assessors or language translation.

Same here. And on the rare occasion you find one that isn't, there's always (literally) hundreds and hundreds of applicants, so you can't even get an admin assistant job.

lostonmars · 24/12/2023 18:50

What's your point?

jollywhite · 24/12/2023 18:53

Let's be honest, there's plenty of genuine people included in this.

Then there's the piss takers. And taking it only took about a page into a thread about 'Autism- AMA' until the OP in that was told to claim DLA.

I don't know what the solution is. I know some genuinely sick people who cannot work and what £ they get isn't enough. Sadly I know a lot more piss takers who know how the system works and are able to skew it to their own economic advantage. Being on DLA or PIP opens a whole host of other benefits if you know what you're doing. I have a friend whose child is on DLA (honestly, nothing much wrong with him other than he's badly behaved, she did a hell of a lot of research as to what to write to make sure she got it) - she gets £700 a month for him, so openly told me she was going to apply for one of the other children saying they had 'anxiety' - guess what she got that too. That's £1400 coming in just for 2 kids. Add on she's now claiming to be a 'carer' for these two children, not sure how much she gets for that...Getting a blue badge saves her £40 a month on a bridge that we live by as she now gets free crossings. She doesn't work. She doesn't need to work. On top of all this she gets some sort of UC top up because children are on DLA and she's a carer. She's already trying to work out how they're going to transfer onto PIP when old enough ..

I have two chronic health conditions and cannot muster the energy to go through obtaining PIP but lots of people are skilled at it. I went self employed because i was in danger of getting fired due to being so poorly. Some months I barely make anything. I'm entitled to nothing. BUT if i went on PIP I would get UC top ups too. Friend keeps going on at me and telling me she will do the form for me to 'ensure' i get it. For me though, it doesn't seem right.

You don't have to like what I say, but i only speak from experience. It is what it is. Do feel genuinely sorry for those who are ill and unable to work.

Davies24 · 24/12/2023 18:53

I'd never report anyone for anything.. What good would it do? These people are not breaking the law going to the pub. In the grand scheme of things ..

who cares? the country is going down the toilet regardless..

Some of these people are my mates and are decent to me. My mate picked me up from Manchester airport in his mothers brand new Motability Volvo.

Jim is very generous to me down the pub when he gets paid, he gets in loads of beers.

WingsofRain · 24/12/2023 18:56

Sususudio · 24/12/2023 16:58

I also wonder if there has been a big reduction in the numbers of job opportunities for people with mental health issues and physical disabilities.

Surely not, given so many entirely WFH jobs

What work from home jobs? I’ve not been able to find any!

MyLibrarywasdukedomlargeenough · 24/12/2023 18:56

There will also be many people who many years ago would have sadly not have survived infancy or the condition that they have whether born with it or acquired. So modern medicine is amazing but not many generations ago many people would not have survived with chronic conditions.

There is a genetic disposition to diabetes within my family and I am sure that some of my ancestors would have died from diabetes complications before the 1920’s when insulin was discovered.

Same with influenza, it killed my DH great great grandfather in the Spanish flu epidemic. He would have had a much better chance of survival these days. there was no aspirin. But virus do leave people unwell with conditions like long covid. Post viral issues are nothing new but in the past the original disease would have been more likely to kill that person.

LakeTiticaca · 24/12/2023 18:58

The decline of mental health coincided with the introduction of the smart phone around 2007, and it gets worse as time goes on .
Who knew that such a tiny innocuous looking device could cause so much harm, and how can we reverse it?
I'm not sure we can tbh.
My own children luckily dodged it but I fear for my grandchildren future

Ffs22 · 24/12/2023 19:02

Spendonsend · 24/12/2023 16:40

My friend called the gp about terrible back pain and was told the nhs will no longer investigate or treat back pain so I cant help feeling more and more are going to struggle with work. Although i note there is a big rise in mental health as the cause. Which is also not treated very usefully /well.

Really? When did this change? Surely any ongoing pain with no obvious cause should be investigated. I’ve had an mri in the last 12 months for back pain( diagnosed herniated disc)

Julen7 · 24/12/2023 19:03

@MumblesParty very insightful post

Legoroses · 24/12/2023 19:06

Ffs22 · 24/12/2023 19:02

Really? When did this change? Surely any ongoing pain with no obvious cause should be investigated. I’ve had an mri in the last 12 months for back pain( diagnosed herniated disc)

My experience with the NHS and back pain is that you get told to try ibruprofen! And when you've had it for ages, it's regarded as 'normal for you'. I only got an MRI when I got cauda equina-like symptoms.

WingsofRain · 24/12/2023 19:08

ToBeOrNotToBee · 24/12/2023 17:42

When a woman has fibroids, endometriosis and adenymyosis, and waits on average 8 years for a diagnosis. During which she will be in excruciating pain, experience flooding at random moments, be anaemic, and be a victim of medical gaslighting with professionals telling her it is all in her head; what exactly part of that is social??

Yes, the social model of disability is hugely controversial and just because certain people keep repeating it loudly doesn’t mean it’s accepted by the majority of disabled people.
My chronic pain and not being able to do what I want in life is nothing to do with society, it’s because of my disability. And yes, I’m a wheelchair user.

UnmentionedElephantDildo · 24/12/2023 19:09

AppleChristsBirthdayMacchiato · 24/12/2023 16:32

I wonder what percentage is due to Long Covid.

Substantial

The risk of long covid is roughly 10% per infection (not per person). So if you're catching it 2-3 times a year, I'm really not surprised the numbers are beginning to mount.

Unfortunately that does not fit the "it's only a cold" narrative.

There are two other covid impacts

  • effects on the cardiovascular system (increase in strokes and other cardiac events, and earlier onset), brain ("fog" aka, plus earlier onset dementia), increase in diabetes and earlier onset
  • reduction in immune function, so people catch other infections that bit more readily and get them that bit worse/longer, and that leads to more sick leave (and whatever complications those diseases might bring) and increase in things like shingles which can be debilitating for quite some time.

The government however seems to prefer a policy to crack down on malingering, rather than looking at the causes of increased illness

And look at making hospitals safe - nosocomial infections have risen, and that just reduces capacity (as well as adding to misery)

MattDamon · 24/12/2023 19:09

I receive PIP.

I'm educated with a professional job. The PIP application forms are purposely designed to be confusing. It took me a month of research to fully understand how to fill them in.

The assessment was over an hour of humiliating and degrading questions aimed at making the applicant say the wrong thing so they can be denied.

I had to supply a diagnosis letter from a specialist (GP wasn't good enough). I paid privately as it was going to take 2+ years on the NHS to even get in front of one. I also had to show evidence of medication (at the highest dose, to show you're really unwell) and ongoing treatments (which the NHS isn't currently providing).

The idea that it's easy or that you can 'self-diagnose' is so preposterous that I'm cringing at the ignorance of some posters.

wudubelieveit · 24/12/2023 19:11

the huge up swing on the graph since 2020 for "Hearing, seeing, allergies, epilepsy, autism" is very telling, i am wondering about the change in attitude to autism diagnoses.

Tumbleweed101 · 24/12/2023 19:11

Mental health issues are hitting children of all ages right now. The question that should be asked is why? What are we doing as a society that is making our younger people so stressed and hopeless?

I'm guessing it's the need for both parents to work full time meaning long hours in wraparound care when young, vaccinations and general food health, cost of living meaning there is no incentive to work hard as you wont get a home and progress anyway. Along with illnesses such as covid giving long term physical issues and the lack of a responsive health system.

Our youngsters need to be able to be adults. My 23yo is desperate to move out and have her own home but the housing costs even on a full time NHS wage are too much for her to manage alone and she doesn't want to go into a shared house as she says its no different to being at home except with strangers. At her age I had a home and two children and was able to manage in private rental.

Ostryga · 24/12/2023 19:12

MattDamon · 24/12/2023 19:09

I receive PIP.

I'm educated with a professional job. The PIP application forms are purposely designed to be confusing. It took me a month of research to fully understand how to fill them in.

The assessment was over an hour of humiliating and degrading questions aimed at making the applicant say the wrong thing so they can be denied.

I had to supply a diagnosis letter from a specialist (GP wasn't good enough). I paid privately as it was going to take 2+ years on the NHS to even get in front of one. I also had to show evidence of medication (at the highest dose, to show you're really unwell) and ongoing treatments (which the NHS isn't currently providing).

The idea that it's easy or that you can 'self-diagnose' is so preposterous that I'm cringing at the ignorance of some posters.

Yes the people who think the govt are giving PIP out left right and centre have clearly never applied for it.

I sent in around 100 pieces of evidence including photos of me having pissed myself in sainsbos during a seizure. And I STILL had to go to tribunal! Madness. And incredibly degrading.

Gonnagetgoingreturnsagain · 24/12/2023 19:18

jollywhite · 24/12/2023 18:53

Let's be honest, there's plenty of genuine people included in this.

Then there's the piss takers. And taking it only took about a page into a thread about 'Autism- AMA' until the OP in that was told to claim DLA.

I don't know what the solution is. I know some genuinely sick people who cannot work and what £ they get isn't enough. Sadly I know a lot more piss takers who know how the system works and are able to skew it to their own economic advantage. Being on DLA or PIP opens a whole host of other benefits if you know what you're doing. I have a friend whose child is on DLA (honestly, nothing much wrong with him other than he's badly behaved, she did a hell of a lot of research as to what to write to make sure she got it) - she gets £700 a month for him, so openly told me she was going to apply for one of the other children saying they had 'anxiety' - guess what she got that too. That's £1400 coming in just for 2 kids. Add on she's now claiming to be a 'carer' for these two children, not sure how much she gets for that...Getting a blue badge saves her £40 a month on a bridge that we live by as she now gets free crossings. She doesn't work. She doesn't need to work. On top of all this she gets some sort of UC top up because children are on DLA and she's a carer. She's already trying to work out how they're going to transfer onto PIP when old enough ..

I have two chronic health conditions and cannot muster the energy to go through obtaining PIP but lots of people are skilled at it. I went self employed because i was in danger of getting fired due to being so poorly. Some months I barely make anything. I'm entitled to nothing. BUT if i went on PIP I would get UC top ups too. Friend keeps going on at me and telling me she will do the form for me to 'ensure' i get it. For me though, it doesn't seem right.

You don't have to like what I say, but i only speak from experience. It is what it is. Do feel genuinely sorry for those who are ill and unable to work.

I’m surprised you’re actually posting this because if anyone dares to it’s all “you don’t know what you’re talking about/kids could be ND etc”.

Now, I know 2 DD’s of family friends both London based. Both have type 1 diabetes, one is working for a start up tech company but fully WFH, the other is a student in her late teens and has suffered from severe depression during and after covid. I’ve got friends who’ve got epilepsy and have worked in an office, my DB with severe asthma has worked in film and TV and doing building and painting and decorating work, a friend who has ME and has been a SAHM/W for years and another latter person who WFH and been a SAHM/W to 2 DD’s one of whom has ADHD, ASD and is starting at Disney soon after training as a graphic designer and doing that and working in a deli. I know another 22 year old ASD young man who’s worked in his local M&S and commuted pre covid to his other supermarket job by train.

I don’t disagree that many young people have been affected by covid, mental health conditions or other debilitating conditions but if it’s easy (I don’t know if it is) to claim benefits and not work and claim illness rather than long term try to study/work then it means they become part of society where it gets easy to opt out.

A school friend of mine who had a learning disability and I’m unsure what else was possibly ND, left school, got married, apparently had outside interests but gradually became ill, I was never quite sure as to what was wrong but she ended up divorced with her 11 year old son, remarried again and when that DH sadly died young, she ended up moving back in with her mother, claiming disability benefits and barely going out but doing cross stitch and talking about her ailments on Facebook, she was diagnosed with cancer during covid and sadly died at age 53, which is far too young in my opinion.

EasternStandard · 24/12/2023 19:18

wudubelieveit · 24/12/2023 19:11

the huge up swing on the graph since 2020 for "Hearing, seeing, allergies, epilepsy, autism" is very telling, i am wondering about the change in attitude to autism diagnoses.

This looks like the biggest jump

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