There are no official lists showing individual MPs' attendance in Parliament or participation in divisions or other Parliamentary proceedings.
Members of Parliament are not obliged by parliamentary rules to attend the House at any time. Political parties may make demands of their MPs, but that is a matter for them.
https://www.parliament.uk/documents/transparency/healthandsafety/Fire-Safety-Policy.pdfSo how does their fire safety work?
https://www.s4me.info/posts/46352/I'm sure I've seen it said somewhere that, while those who speak during a debate are obviously recorded, those who simply attend aren't.
Both CAB & Benefits & Work say roughly the same thing in relation to condition management for the ESA work-related activity group.
Benefits and Work:
"ESA work-related activity group members have to attend work-focused interviews and may have to undertake work-related activities, such as training or condition management programmes, but support group members do not."
https://www.benefitsandwork.co.uk/e...esa-glossary/1345-work-related-activity-group
CAB:
"The work-related activity you’ll be asked to do depends on what’s available in your area. It could be something like:
[...]
"The activities are all things that the DWP thinks will help you to eventually get into work."
- new ways to manage your condition or disability
https://www.citizensadvice.org.uk/b...while-youre-getting-esa/about-the-esa-groups/
WRAG claimants can be sanctioned for not participating in compulsory work-related activities they've been asked to partake in. Successfully challenging a sanction on the strict basis that a person shouldn't have to participate in condition management activity that involves NICE-sanctioned interventions because they believe those interventions to be counterproductive or even harmful would probably be difficult as things stand in relation to the Guideline currently.
https://www.citizensadvice.org.uk/b...owance/while-youre-getting-esa/esa-sanctions/
What I'm clumsily trying to suggest is that an activity group, possibly based on the science of 'work is good for you' could, I'm suggesting, possibly be challenged in a legal way
I'm glad to read your appeal was successful @AR68. It sounds like they felt you met substantial risk to health under the ESA Regs.
It might be a slightly different kettle of fish wrt mandatory considerations in particular but also the appeals process for WRAG-associated sanctions, simply because a claimant has already been adjudged sufficiently well for work-related activity. But of course that isn't to say were someone to appeal a relevant sanction on the basis of a general objection to GET/CBT that it wouldn't be worth producing (a proportionate amount of) evidence on the NICE review and PACE issues.
I fully agree with this. But I've just had a response from my MP, who in stating this, seems to be using it as a prop for implying MPs should not be getting involved at all. I know this is a cop out on his part, but would like to be able to respond back with what I believe MPs should be doing ... but I'm having trouble pinning this down to something succinct and concrete - if I cannot do that then there is no point replying to him. I don't want to get bogged down into all the stuff we know, but would turn him off in seconds. But I don't want to just respond with nebulous generalities. Succinct and concrete. If I can do that then I can reinforce it by asking him to support Carol Monaghan in getting a House of Commons debate, or at least try to get him to attend such a debate. But I need one or two tangible and worthwhile objectives that MPs most certainly should get involved with, else he is not going to be convinced of there being anything to debate. I'm unexpectedly struggling with this.and no way that NICE should be influenced by MPs.
... but I'm having trouble pinning this down to something succinct and concrete - if I cannot do that then there is no point replying to him. I don't want to get bogged down into all the stuff we know, but would turn him off in seconds. But I don't want to just respond with nebulous generalities. Succinct and concrete.
Sadly from a parents' forum tonight i learned of an ill child ( has been assessed by a charity at parents' s request and advised as very ill - i am assuming moderate slipping towards severe) who at the fatigue clinic appointment was pronounced to be getting better and so should be commencing sleep hygiene and GET . The reason given - to address deconditioning.
Unless GET is kicked into touch how many more children will be harmed in the next couple of years.
Any help, from you Jonathan and/or others, would be much appreciated. Short notice, but would like to get a reply back to him tomorrow if possible.
Many patients report a strong link between exercise and an exacerbation of symptoms. If this is the case, there are no clear grounds on which to particularly encourage exercise. However, it seems reasonable that the undesirable consequences of inactivity should be minimised.
Muscle biochemistry and pathophysiology in postviral fatigue syndrome. Edwards RHT Newham DJ Peters TJ
British Medical Bulletin (1991) Vol 47, No 4, pp826-837 @p835
This does not sound like an endorsement of GET.
While I think of it, did anyone get hold of a copy of the briefing that Michael Sharpe sent to MPs ahead of the debate? It would be interesting to see how his alternative facts are put across.
My impression was that it did not say anything particularly new.
One thing that maybe one day I should do is contact Richard Edwards and ask if would be prepared to give his view on recent events.