This
is not a cry for help, nor is it a whinge. It's an attempt to
illustrate the problems that I face having memory difficulties. This
week I received a penalty charge from the NHS because I indicated
that I was 'receiving NHS Tax Credit Exemption Certificate.' They
want £120.60 by the 11th December.
It's
something I will definitely need help with: formal documents like
this make very little sense to me, and they arrive in the mail so
thick and fast that I can't keep on top of them.
I've
mentioned before, I have brain damage, memory difficulties and
depression. I've worked most of my adult life, with minimal success,
and since I was 29 I've been in receipt of some low-rate benefits- I
was on Disability Living Allowance (DLA) and Working Tax Credits
(WTC). I've needed a lot of help getting them and staying up to date
with information relating to them.
In
January my DLA was stopped, as the government was replacing this with
the controversial Personal Independence Payment (PIP), something I
had to apply (and fight tooth and nail) for. In February I was still
in receipt of WTC and by March I had been allocated an award of PIP
(albeit less than I was getting from DLA.) Around this same time, it
now seems, my WTC were stopped. I was, for some reason, under the
impression that the two were now being paid together and that WTC
were part of the PIP payment. This is the kind of mistake I make, due
to the condition that makes me eligible for PIP in the first place.
I
thought my finances were under strain; it now seems I'm getting to
the bottom of the issue.
On
7th September, I went to my dentist and claimed that I was
on WTC, making me eligible for free treatment. I was not. The PIP I'm
receipt of apparently does not cover me for dentist visits, so it looks like I'm going to have to pay £120.60. This is an honest
mistake, one of many I make every week.
The exemption certificate that I have, a plastic card the size of a credit card, expired at the end of April. I, typically, forgot to chase this up.
I
guess there's a few options- I work in social services so there are
colleagues I could ask for advice, and I could always push the boat
out- on my PIP application form I explained that formal documents
like these make very little sense to me. Unfortunately, because I
speak well and have decent written skills, social services will have
nothing to do with me and any NHS support I receive is always
short-term (I'm not meeting any NHS people right now.) The only
talking support I get are my ever-loyal and over-relied-on parents,
and my line manager. I suppose I could bring this to Andy's Man Club
and see what advice they could give. And ultimately, I could try to
get the fine waived on disability grounds. It's not like I tried to
blag them. This happened because of the condition.
Another
issue: I'm on Sertraline, an antidepressant, and have been for some
time. I've been telling the chemist I'm eligible for free treatment.
This site doesn't suggest I am: there's no mention of PIP, only the
tax credits that I forgot had been stopped. I don't know what I told
the chemist I was in receipt of, so am I about to be bombarded with
numerous fines for claiming free prescriptions? I did have an NHS exemption card in my wallet but
I
started by suggesting that this blog post was not a cry for help.
That said, any advice that anyone can give me, I'd be grateful for.
matthewtuckey@hotmail.com.
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