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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> UK Social Security and Child Support Commissioners' Decisions >> [2006] UKSSCSC CSDLA_916_2005 (08 September 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKSSCSC/2006/CSDLA_916_2005.html Cite as: [2006] UKSSCSC CSDLA_916_2005 |
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[2006] UKSSCSC CSDLA_916_2005 (08 September 2006)
DECISION OF SOCIAL SECURITY COMMISSIONER
"At page 18 of the papers the claimant says
'I suffer from depression, which can mean my wife has to tell me to get up, get washed, brush teeth, and shave every day. I don't place any importance on these things. My wife has to force me'.
A second type of care need is then set out.
'I have massive problems with communication. I cannot make facial expressions. I have a lack of sympathy and lack of social skills'."
"However, even where an activity is such that it cannot itself properly be described as a bodily function, that will not be the end of the matter - because recourse will then have to be had to the discrete bodily functions which are involved in the activity and the extent to which they are impaired, and particularly as to whether the functions or any of them are so impaired that assistance to the level of any of the provisions of section 72 is required in respect of the disablement. In these circumstances, the relevant discrete bodily functions will have to be identified and "unbundled", considered and assessed. Indeed, given the purpose of identifying the relevant bodily functions given above (paragraphs 36-37), in functionally complex activities which may be borderline, we regard this "unbundling" exercise as the correct approach in any event, and warn against the temptation of considering in very fine detail whether the complex activity can truly be described as a single bodily function or not. We consider the potential dangers of such an arid exercise are well illustrated in this very case. As the various House of Lords opinions referred to above (but notably that of Lord Slynn in Cockburn) make clear, in borderline cases it cannot be incorrect to unbundle functions in this way, and it is likely to be helpful in approaching the issue of assistance reasonably required."
They then went on to say in paragraph 46:
"This suggests that he considered some form of social interaction may amount to a complex bodily function, as he apparently did "communication". But, again, even if that be the case, in the context of section 72 the functions may need "unbundling" so that the nature and degree of attention reasonably required to address the relevant functional deficit can be assessed. Again, in our view, it was insufficient for the tribunal merely to find that "social integration" was not a bodily function. They erred in law in failing to identify the specific bodily functions that were deficient in the claimant's case, and in failing to assess the attention reasonably required in respect of that deficiency."
(Signed)
D J MAY QC
Commissioner
Date: 8 September 2006