PHILIPPA DAY BENEFIT ERRORS PREDOMINANT FACTOR IN MUMS DEATH

Philippa Day Benefit Errors Predominant Factor In Mums Death

Philippa Day Benefit Errors Predominant Factor In Mums Death

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1. in mother Philippa Day’s fatal overdose, inquest rules – The …

Jan 28, 2021 — DWP benefits system was ‘predominant factor’ in mother Philippa Day’s mother took an overdose that led to her death after her benefits (1)

Jan 28, 2021 — Flaws in the disability benefits system were “the predominant factor and the only acute factor” that led to a young disabled mother taking her (2)

Jan 27, 2021 — says Philippa Day’s experiences with DWP were ‘predominant factor’ in “systemic errors” had led to failures by benefits officials.(3)

2. BBC: Philippa Day: Benefit errors ‘predominant factor’ in mum’s death

Authorities who dealt with a benefits claim from a single mother, who took a fatal BBC: Philippa Day: Benefit errors ‘predominant factor’ in mum’s death.(4)

Philippa Day: Benefit (5)

May 10, 2021 — In August 2019, 27-year-old mother Philippa Day was found dead at her Nottingham home after her request for an at-home benefits assessment (6)

3. Family of mum, 27, found dying with benefits letter after being …

Feb 28, 2021 — Philippa Day (pictured) was found dying with a letter from the Department of in handling her benefit claim were “the predominant factor, (7)

Jan 27, 2021 — Philippa Day: Benefit errors ‘predominant factor’ in mum’s death – BBC News these are people and not National Insurance numbers (8)

4. Benefits system errors ‘predominant factor’ – Disability Rights UK

Jan 27, 2021 — Errors in the benefits system were the ‘predominant factor’ in Philippa Day’s death, a Coroner has found. Recording a narrative conclusion Missing: mums ‎| Must include: mums(9)

Jan 27, 2021 — The inquest into the death of Philippa Day (pictured, inset) is being held of a benefits claim, was in my findings a predominant factor, (10)

Philippa Day: Benefit errors ‘predominant factor’ in mum’s death. Philippa Day was found collapsed beside a letter rejecting her request for an at-home (11)

A mental ill young mother took an overdose that led to her death after her benefits were stopped, a coroner has found, identifying the financial stress (12)

Philippa Day: Benefit errors ‘predominant factor’ in mum’s death – BBC News Coffey dodges MP’s questions over death of Philippa Day – Disability News (13)

5. ‘My benefits have been severely cut…I cannot survive without …

Jan 28, 2021 — A mum took her own life following ‘multiple errors’ with her benefits claim, a coroner has ruled. Philippa Day was found unconscious in (14)

Jan 27, 2021 — Philippa Day, who suffered from agoraphobia and anxiety, by the problems in handling her benefit claim were “the predominant factor, (15)

Flaws in the disability benefits system were “the predominant factor and the her death found that, because of its errors, Philippa’s total benefits had (16)

6. The Journal of Pediatrics: Home Page

A 5-day-old boy was transferred to our hospital because of bloody stools and vomiting. He had bloody stools after taking a formula made from cow’s milk since 2 (17)

Feb 9, 2021 — that the problems Pip (Philippa) Day had with her application for disability benefits were “the predominant…and the only acute factor” (18)

Department of work and pensions manages to drive another vulnerable person into debt and a sad lonely death. bbc.co.uk/news/u.(19)

Jan 29, 2021 — “As a result of errors made, Philippa Day’s income from benefits more than of a benefits claim, was in my findings a predominant factor, (20)

7. Coroner criticises DWP in Philippa Day case – Ekklesia

Jan 29, 2021 — At the conclusion of the inquest into Ms Day’s death in October But he said the predominant factor affecting her decision to take an (21)

Jan 28, 2021 — Philippa Day died in 2019, two months after overdosing on insulin Payment benefits claim that exacerbated her mental health problems and (22)

Philippa Day: Benefit errors ‘predominant factor’ in mum’s death. Philippa Day was found collapsed beside a letter rejecting her request for an at-home (23)

8. Philippa Day: Benefit errors ‘predominant factor’ in mum’s death

Philippa Day: Benefit errors ‘predominant factor’ in mum’s death. Philippa Day was found collapsed beside a letter rejecting her request for an at-home (24)

Jan 28, 2021 — The inquest in Nottingham into the death of Philippa Day has But he said the predominant factor affecting her decision to take an (25)

Jul 20, 2021 — Relatives of Errol Graham, Jodey Whiting, Philippa Day, Kevin Dooley, and Clive Johnson are calling for the Government to launch an inquiry (26)

9. Cerebral palsy – Wikipedia

Cerebral palsy (CP) is a group of permanent movement disorders that appear in early In babies that are born at term risk factors include problems with the Signs and symptomsCerebral palsy is defined as “a group of permanent disorders of the development of movement and posture, causing activity limitation, that are attributed to non-progressive disturbances that occurred in the developing fetal or infant brain.” While movement problems are the central feature of CP, difficulties with thinking, learning, feeling, communication and behavior often co-occur, with 28% having epilepsy, 58% having difficulties with communication, at least 42% having problems with their vision, and 23–56% having learning disabilities. Muscle contractions in people with cerebral palsy are commonly thought to arise from overactivation. Cerebral palsy is characterized by abnormal muscle tone, reflexes, or motor development and coordination. The neurological lesion is primary and permanent while orthopedic manifestations are secondary and progressive. In cerebral palsy unequal growth between muscle-tendon units and bone eventually leads to bone and joint deformities. At first, deformities are dynamic. Over time, deformities tend to become static, and joint contractures develop. Deformities in general and static deformities in specific (joint contractures) cause increasing gait difficulties in the form of tip-toeing gait, due to tightness of the Achilles tendon, and scissoring gait, due to tightness of the hip adductors. These gait patterns are LanguageSpeech and language disorders are common in people with cerebral palsy. The incidence of dysarthria is estimated to range from 31% to 88%, and around a quarter of people with CP are non-verbal. Speech problems are associated with poor respiratory control, laryngeal and velopharyngeal dysfunction, and oral articulation disorders that are due to restricted movement in the oral-facial muscles. There are three major types of dysarthria in cerebral palsy: spastic, dyskinetic (athetosis), and ataxic. Early use of augmentative and alternative communication systems may assist the child in developing spoken language skills. Overall language delay is associated with problems of cognition, deafness, and learned helplessness. Children with cerebral palsy are at risk of learned helplessness and becoming passive communicators, initiating little communication. Early intervention with this clientele, and their parents, often targets situations in which children communicate with others so that they learn that they can control people and objects in their environment through this communication, including making choices, decisions, and mistakes.SkeletonFor bones to attain their normal shape and size, they require the stresses from normal musculature. People with cerebral palsy are at risk of low bone mineral density. The shafts of the bones are often thin (gracile), and become thinner during growth. When compared to these thin shafts (diaphyses), the centres (metaphyses) often appear quite enlarged (ballooning). Due to more than normal joint compression caused by muscular imbalances, articular cartilage may atrophy, :46 leading to narrowed joint spaces. Depending on the degree of spasticity, a person with CP may exhibit a variety of angular joint deformities. Because vertebral bodies need vertical gravitational loading forces to develop properly, spasticity and an abnormal gait can hinder proper or full bone and skeletal development. People with CP tend to be shorter in height than the average person because their bones are not allowed to grow to their full potential. Sometimes bones grow to different lengths, so the person may have one leg longer than the other. Children with CP are prone to low trauma fractures, particularly children with higher GMFCS levels who cannot walk. This further affects a child’s mobility, strength, experience of pain, and can lead to missed schooling or child abuse suspicions. These children generally have fractures in the legs, whereas non-affected children mostly Pain and sleepPain is common and may result from the inherent deficits associated with the condition, along with the numerous procedures children typically face. When children with cerebral palsy are in pain, they experience worse muscle spasms. Pain is associated with tight or shortened muscles, abnormal posture, stiff joints, unsuitable orthosis, etc. Hip migration or dislocation is a recognizable source of pain in CP children and especially in the adolescent population. Nevertheless, the adequate scoring and scaling of pain in CP children remains challenging. Pain in CP has a number of different causes, and different pains respond to different treatments. There is also a high likelihood of chronic sleep disorders secondary to both physical and environmental factors. Children with cerebral palsy have significantly higher rates of sleep disturbance than typically developing children. Babies with cerebral palsy who have stiffness issues might cry more and be harder to put to sleep than non-disabled babies, or “floppy” babies might be lethargic. Chronic pain is under-recognized in children with cerebral palsy, even though 3 out of 4 children with cerebral palsy experience pain. Adults with CP also experience more pain than the general population.EatingDue to sensory and motor impairments, those with CP may have difficulty preparing food, holding utensils, or chewing and swallowing. An infant with CP may not be able to suck, swallow or chew. Gastro-oesophageal reflux is common in children with CP. Children with CP may have too little or too much sensitivity around and in the mouth. Poor balance when sitting, lack of control of the head, mouth, and trunk, not being able to bend the hips enough to allow the arms to stretch forward to reach and grasp food or utensils, and lack of hand-eye coordination can make self-feeding difficult. Feeding difficulties are related to higher GMFCS levels. Dental problems can also contribute to difficulties with eating. Pneumonia is also common where eating difficulties exist, caused by undetected aspiration of food or liquids. Fine finger dexterity, like that needed for picking up a utensil, is more frequently impaired than gross manual dexterity, like that needed for spooning food onto a plate. Grip strength impairments are less common. Children with severe cerebral palsy, particularly with oropharyngeal issues, are at risk of undernutrition. Triceps skin fold tests have been found to be a very reliable indicator of malnutrition in children with cerebral palsy.Associated disordersAssociated disorders include intellectual disabilities, seizures, muscle contractures, abnormal gait, osteoporosis, communication disorders, malnutrition, sleep disorders, and mental health disorders, such as depression and anxiety. In addition to these, functional gastrointestinal abnormalities contributing to bowel obstruction, vomiting, and constipation may also arise. Adults with cerebral palsy may have ischemic heart disease, cerebrovascular disease, cancer, and trauma more often. Obesity in people with cerebral palsy or a more severe Gross Motor Function Classification System assessment in particular are considered risk factors for multimorbidity. Other medical issues can be mistaken for being symptoms of cerebral palsy, and so may not be treated correctly. Related conditions can include apraxia, dysarthria or other communication disorders, sensory impairments, urinary incontinence, fecal incontinence, or behavioural disorders. Seizure management is more difficult in people with CP as seizures often last longer. Epilepsy and asthma are common co-occurring diseases in adults with CP. The associated disorders that co-occur with cerebral palsy may be more disabling than the motor function problems.See more sections on »(27)

The Catholic Church has warned that “rejection of the Church’s authority and her teaching [] can be at the source of errors in judgment in moral conduct”. An ViewsFurther information: Origins of morality and Morality. Although humanity has no generally accepted definition of conscience or universal agreement about its role in ethical decision-making, three approaches have addressed it: Religious views · Secular views · Philosophical viewsEvolutionary biologyContemporary scientists in evolutionary biology seek to explain conscience as a function of the brain that evolved to facilitate altruism within societies. In his book The God Delusion, Richard Dawkins states that he agrees with Robert Hinde’s Why Good is Good, Michael Shermer’s The Science of Good and Evil, Robert Buckman’s Can We Be Good Without God? and Marc Hauser’s Moral Minds, that our sense of right and wrong can be derived from our Darwinian past. He subsequently reinforced this idea through the lens of the gene-centered view of evolution, since the unit of natural selection is neither an individual organism nor a group, but rather the “selfish” gene, and these genes could ensure their own “selfish” survival by, inter alia, pushing individuals to act altruistically towards its kin.SecularFurther information: Psychology and Sociology. Illustration of François Chifflart (1825–1901) for La Conscience (by Victor Hugo). Charles Darwin thought that any animal endowed with well-marked social instincts would inevitably acquire a moral sense or conscience, as its intellectual powers approximated man’s. The secular approach to conscience includes psychological, physiological, sociological, humanitarian, and authoritarian views. Lawrence Kohlberg considered critical conscience to be an important psychological stage in the proper moral development of humans, associated with the capacity to rationally weigh principles of responsibility, being best encouraged in the very young by linkage with humorous personifications (such as Jiminy Cricket) and later in adolescents by debates about individually pertinent moral dilemmas. Erik Erikson placed the development of conscience in the ‘pre-schooler’ phase of his eight stages of normal human personality development. The psychologist Martha Stout terms conscience “an intervening sense of obligation based in our emotional attachments.” Thus a good conscience is associated with feelings of integrity, psychological wholeness and peacefulness and is often described using adjectives such as “quiet”, “clear” and “easy”. Sigmund Freud regarded conscience as originating psychologically from the growth of Neuroscience and artificial conscienceNumerous case studies of brain damage have shown that damage to areas of the brain (such as the anterior prefrontal cortex) results in the reduction or elimination of inhibitions, with a corresponding radical change in behaviour. When the damage occurs to adults, they may still be able to perform moral reasoning; but when it occurs to children, they may never develop that ability. Attempts have been made by neuroscientists to locate the free will necessary for what is termed the ‘veto’ of conscience over unconscious mental processes (see Neuroscience of free will and Benjamin Libet) in a scientifically measurable awareness of an intention to carry out an act occurring 350–400 microseconds after the electrical discharge known as the ‘readiness potential.’ Jacques Pitrat claims that some kind of artificial conscience is beneficial in artificial intelligence systems to improve their long-term performance and direct their introspective processing.Conscience as a society-forming instinctJeremy Bentham: “Fanaticism never sleeps it is never stopped by conscience; for it has pressed conscience into its service.” Michel Glautier argues that conscience is one of the instincts and drives which enable people to form societies: groups of humans without these drives or in whom they are insufficient cannot form societies and do not reproduce their kind as successfully as those that do. War criminal Adolf Eichmann in passport used to enter Argentina: his conscience spoke with the “respectable voice” of the indoctrinated wartime German society that surrounded him. Charles Darwin considered that conscience evolved in humans to resolve conflicts between competing natural impulses-some about self-preservation but others about safety of a family or community; the claim of conscience to moral authority emerged from the “greater duration of impression of social instincts” in the struggle for survival. In such a view, behavior destructive to a person’s society (either to its structures or to the persons it comprises) is bad or “evil”. Thus, conscience can be viewed as an outcome of those biological drives that prompt humans to avoid provoking fear or contempt in others; being experienced as guilt and shame in differing ways from society to society and person to person. A requirement of conscience in this view is the capacity to see ourselves from PhilosophicalFurther information: Free will, Compatibilism and incompatibilism, Determinism, Libertarianism (metaphysics), Theory of justification, Virtue ethics, Metaethics, Moral motivation, and Normative ethics. The word “conscience” derives etymologically from the Latin conscientia, meaning “privity of knowledge” or “with-knowledge”. The English word implies internal awareness of a moral standard in the mind concerning the quality of one’s motives, as well as a consciousness of our own actions. Thus conscience considered philosophically may be first, and perhaps most commonly, a largely unexamined “gut feeling” or “vague sense of guilt” about what ought to be or should have been done. Conscience in this sense is not necessarily the product of a process of rational consideration of the moral features of a situation (or the applicable normative principles, rules or laws) and can arise from parental, peer group, religious, state or corporate indoctrination, which may or may not be presently consciously acceptable to the person (“traditional conscience”). Conscience may be defined as the practical reason employed when applying moral convictions to a situation (“critical conscience”). In purportedly morally mature mystical people who have developed this capacity through daily contemplation or meditation combined with selfless service to others, critical See more sections on »(28)

10. The Summons of Death on the Medieval and Renaissance …

Deaths that brandished spears from medieval painting and stage, there would have been no Doctor Faustus, no Bosola, no Yorick. It is the purpose of this (29)

Jun 30, 2021 — Prompted by the death of a claimant in 1998 (Mr. T) as described here: by the Benefits Agency was a contributing factor to Mr T’s death: (30)

Excerpt Links

(1). in mother Philippa Day’s fatal overdose, inquest rules – The …
(2). Philippa Day: Flawed PIP system led to young mum’s death …
(3). Inquest finds mother took overdose after removal of disability …
(4). BBC: Philippa Day: Benefit errors ‘predominant factor’ in mum’s death
(5). Philippa Day: Benefit Errors ‘predominant Factor’ In Mum’s Death …
(6). What Happened With The Philippa Day Case & Why It Matters
(7). Family of mum, 27, found dying with benefits letter after being …
(8). Helen Dunlop on Twitter: “Philippa Day: Benefit errors …
(9). Benefits system errors ‘predominant factor’ – Disability Rights UK
(10). ‘Multiple errors’ in handling of mum’s benefits claim leading up …
(11). Aberdeen Action on Disability Official | Facebook
(12). DWP benefits system was ‘predominant factor’ in mother Philippa …
(13). About Philippa Day: (1968-) | Biography, Facts, Career, Wiki, Life …
(14). ‘My benefits have been severely cut…I cannot survive without …
(15). Mum, 27, took fatal overdose after litany of 28 … – The Mirror
(16). Philippa Day: Flawed PIP system led to young mum’s death …
(17). The Journal of Pediatrics: Home Page
(18). Following the conclusion of Philippa Day’s Inquest, what could …
(19). [Top Stories] – Philippa Day: Benefit errors ‘predominant factor’ in …
(20). Mum took her own life after benefit mistakes saw income …
(21). Coroner criticises DWP in Philippa Day case – Ekklesia
(22). DWP accused of ‘gross incompetence’ after benefit claimant’s …
(23). Failing Mental Health Sevices
(24). Philippa Day: Benefit errors ‘predominant factor’ in mum’s death
(25). Mum Philippa Day killed by benefits brutality – WinVisible
(26). Bereaved families call for public inquiry into deaths of benefits …
(27). Cerebral palsy – Wikipedia
(28). Conscience – Wikipedia
(29). The Summons of Death on the Medieval and Renaissance …
(30). Timeline – note that this is simply an aide memoire. Unless …