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Originally Posted by Jaymoss
Firstly no it does not clearly demonstrate anything this was only family and his grand kids. Plus he might have been acting ok another classic symptom of mental illness is hiding it from family and those close to you
The guy had obviously took a turn for the worse as he isolated himself long enough to die alone waiting to be found by the bailiffs
As I said you clearly have no idea about mental illness at all
I can only guess but the added stress of the review along with other factors triggered a worsening of his symptoms.
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If he was ok with his family, he wasn't clinically depressed.
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On Wednesday, the DWP was found to have acted lawfully in stopping Errol’s benefits.
Mr Justice Bourne ruled that the DWP “were confronted with a complete cessation of contact by Mr Graham and an absence of any attempt by him to do anything to permit his ESA review to progress… neither the legislation nor the defendant’s policy at the time mandated any further specific steps to be taken.”
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Liverpool FC-supporting Mr Graham was "outgoing" before his depression worsened after his dad's death in 2005.
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Clinical Depression.
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The term clinical depression is commonly used to describe depression that is a type of mental illness, not a normal, temporary mood caused by life events or grieving.
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Mr Graham's daughter-in-law told the Mirror: "He had always plodded along as long as he got the financial support needed.
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---------- Post added at 19:14 ---------- Previous post was at 19:13 ----------
Quote:
Originally Posted by Jaymoss
End of the day the guy was clearly to sick to cope without benefits as he died without them so whatever anyone says the DWP stopping his benefits contributed to his death and the decision to stop them was wrong
It is one thing sanctioning the unemployed for not seeking work when they should but sanctioning the mentally ill is clearly dangerous
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When you say "benefits", you mean money.