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Image Description: Brown & Cream Coloured Image Depicting a Typewriter With Wording "Human Rights Act 1998" Typed On Paper. Image Credit: PhotoFunia.com Category: Vintage Typewriter.

A Lifeline for Those Unable to Work

We do NOT encourage dependency on benefits for those who are capable of working. This article is aimed at supporting individuals with genuine illnesses and disabilities to know their rights and navigate a system that often overlooks their needs. To help the government and streamline the process, individuals should provide extensive medical history and reports from doctors, specialists, and other healthcare providers to prove their inability to work.

Disability Travel wheelchair

Border Control Horror Stories: The Degrading Treatment of People with Disabilities

Crossing international borders can be an anxiety-inducing experience for anyone. For individuals with disabilities, however, the process often escalates into a distressing ordeal that infringes upon dignity, induces humiliation, and highlights systemic inequities. Across the globe, people with visible and invisible disabilities encounter discriminatory practices, racism, and unwarranted assumptions at border controls, transforming an already challenging process into a deeply degrading experience.

Diabetes

Diabetes and PIP Eligibility: A Guide to Daily Challenges and Support

Diabetes is a chronic condition that affects millions of people worldwide. While manageable, it can have a significant impact on daily living and necessitate the use of aids, additional care, and specialized diets. Personal Independence Payment (PIP) is a benefit in the UK designed to support individuals with long-term health conditions or disabilities, including diabetes, by helping them meet the extra costs associated with their condition.

Controversy Over ‘Rolling Power Outages’ (DHSC)

The UK Government: ‘The Department of Health and Social Care’ (DHSC) has been ordered to release redacted parts of a key document that details how power cuts could affect disabled people, pensioners, and others who are vulnerable. This decision is important because it sheds light on how prepared—or unprepared—the government might be to protect some of society’s most vulnerable members during power outages.