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.