A
healthcare regulator has decided that a notorious benefits assessor
will not face any disciplinary action over allegations of dishonesty,
even though his former employer admitted that he lied in an assessment
report.
Paramedic
Alan Barham still faces being struck off for comments he made to an
undercover reporter while working for the government contractor Capita,
which were aired in a Channel 4 Dispatches documentary last April.
But
the Health and Care Professions Council (HCPC), which is investigating
Barham’s actions, has decided that separate allegations that he lied in a
report he wrote after assessing a disabled woman’s eligibility for
personal independence payment (PIP) will not be dealt with by a
disciplinary hearing.
The
conclusions reached by the council will add to concerns that regulators
are failing to act when they receive complaints from disabled people
that healthcare professionals have written dishonest reports after
carrying out face-to-face PIP assessments.
Following
a two-month investigation, Disability News Service (DNS) has collected
scores of cases of disabled people who claim that PIP assessors like
Barham lied repeatedly in reports produced for the Department for Work
and Pensions.
Undercover footage from the Dispatches programme (pictured) showed Barham admitting that he sometimes completed his PIP assessment reports before even meeting the claimants.
He
also told an undercover reporter that he could usually “completely
dismiss” what he was told by PIP claimants, and made offensive comments
about an overweight claimant who was unable to carry out her own
personal care.
After
watching the programme, two disabled people who had been assessed by
Barham lodged complaints about his behaviour, based both on the
documentary and on reports that he had written following face-to-face
assessments of their entitlement to PIP.
An
HCPC investigating committee has now concluded that the comments Barham
made in the documentary are serious enough for him to be found guilty of
“misconduct and/or lack of competence” if a disciplinary panel finds
them proven.
But
the committee has also decided that allegations about the two PIP
assessments carried out by Barham – which were not part of the
documentary – are not serious enough to merit findings of misconduct
and/or lack of competence, even though Capita has already concluded that
Barham lied in one of the assessment reports.
The
committee concluded that the allegations concerning lying and other
failings in assessments “could be considered to fall short of the
expected standards of a Paramedic” but “do not, in the Panel’s view,
constitute misconduct and/or lack of competence”.
David
Nicholls, from Northampton, the husband of one of the PIP claimants,
has told DNS of his anger and frustration at the way HCPC has dealt with
the case.
DNS
has seen Capita’s response to his complaint about the assessment report
Barham wrote following an assessment of his wife, Jacqueline, in March
last year, a month before the Dispatches documentary was screened.
As a result of the assessment, she was found ineligible for PIP.
It
was only after the documentary was aired and DWP agreed to allow her to
be reassessed that she was granted the enhanced rate for both the daily
living and mobility components of PIP.
In
the response to the Nicholls complaint about Barham, a Capita senior
complaint handler wrote: “You stated that you disagree with the content
of your assessment report and that you believe [Barham] had made
inaccurate assumptions and had lied in his report…
“Based on the outcome of my investigation, I uphold this element of your complaint.”
In
his report, Barham repeatedly stated that what he was told by Jacqueline
Nicholls was not backed up by the tests he carried out during the
assessment.
But
David Nicholls said Barham had ignored the impact of his wife’s brain
injury on both her physical and mental functioning, including her
seizures, her confusion when asked too many questions, the lack of
feeling in parts of her body, her memory problems, and her tendency to
get lost when on her own.
Barham
reported instead that she could plan and follow routes, understand
complex written information without any help, and make her own budgeting
decisions.
Nicholls said: “He has misled people with the findings in his report in the worst possible way.
“His assessment gave no consideration to brain injury at all. Jacquie could not take it in.”
He said that the effect of dishonest assessors like Barham on disabled people was “devastating”.
He
said he was “very upset” by the HCPC decision, which he said showed that
it was “letting down any person who feels they have been badly treated
or assessed.
“It
sends out the message that no matter what your assessor does or says,
they will get away with it. They will be protected and never seen to be
at fault.”
An
HCPC spokeswoman said: “We can confirm that complaints against Alan
Barham are currently being investigated through our fitness to practice
process and an allegation pertaining to these matters has been referred
to the conduct and competence committee.
“However,
due to the ongoing nature of the investigation and our duty of
confidentiality to all parties involved it would be inappropriate for us
to comment any further at this stage.
“Once
the matter is listed for final hearing the full details of the public
allegation will be published on our website four weeks prior to the
hearing date.”
She
later added: “I can confirm to you that [the Dispatches claims]are the
only allegations going forward to the final hearing, they are now the
only two allegations in the public domain.
“Essentially, this means [the allegations concerning the two PIP assessments]will not be further considered.
“However
as this is a private document stemming from an independent panel
decision we cannot provide any further comment on the reasoning behind
this.”
DNS has approached Barham for a comment, but he had not replied by noon today (Thursday).
Alan Barham can be contacted via his website - http://www.firstaidplustraining.co.uk/
His phone number is -
01536 656 998
Alan also promotes Event Paramedics on his website as he suggests he works with them.
Their website and contact details are - http://www.eventparamedics.co.uk/our-staff.php
http://www.disabilitynewsservice.com/pip-investigation-regulator-refuses-to-act-over-capita-assessment-report-lies/
Alan Barham can be contacted via his website - http://www.firstaidplustraining.co.uk/
His phone number is -
01536 656 998
Alan also promotes Event Paramedics on his website as he suggests he works with them.
Their website and contact details are - http://www.eventparamedics.co.uk/our-staff.php
http://www.disabilitynewsservice.com/pip-investigation-regulator-refuses-to-act-over-capita-assessment-report-lies/

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