ViolentPanda
Hardly getting over it.
I work with young adult carers, caring for people with all sorts of disabilities and mental health issues. Some have attended appointments with the people they care for and say they are extremely intimidating. The appointments are an hour long. With many conditions they change on a day to day basis so how they can access what someone's capabilities are in an hour is beyond me. People with mental health issues who are paranoid and delusional are not often honest or even aware how ill they are. In one case the parent of some one i support had their benefits cut as a result of one of these assessments. Then due to the resulting stress of having no money and complicated forms to complete ended up in mental health hospital again for a few months. Hardly a cost saving exercise is it! I've also heard that their are bonus incentives for atos staff to get people off of benefits, but i can't say for sure that's true. IMO this system only serves to go after the most vulnerable people in society to save a few pennies. If you have one of these assessments go in the worse pain you possibly can as ViolentPanda says. They assess you in the waiting room and your ability to get into the examining room and walk from the chair to the bed.....or so i've heard!
All of the Incapacity Benefit medicals I had (administered, if I recall correctly, by doctors working for Schlumberger-Sema, the company that had the contract for doing so at the time), you were very much observed by the reception staff. As I walk with sticks, and take a while to sit on or rise from a chair, I'm absolutely sure I made a "better" impression than those people who had nothing visibly wrong with them.