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    Eligible Britons with certain common medical conditions can get over £100 a week through the Department for Work and Pension’s (DWP) benefit.

    Up to 56 conditions can qualify a person to receive the support - from  to - and people must be of or over the age (currently 66) to claim.

    As many as 1.6 million pensioners are claiming the benefit at present, but it’s thought that many more may be eligible but aren’t seeking support.

    The payment rate increased by 10.1 percent this year, meaning a larger sum is on offer to support while living costs remain high. Attendance Allowance is paid at two rates, the lower rate and the higher rate.

    Payment rates are based on how much help is needed, not any current help the person does or doesn’t get, so it could pay for people to check if they may qualify.

    The full list of 56 conditions that can qualify for Attendance Allowance include:

    • Arthritis
    • Spondylosis
    • Back Pain – other/precise diagnosis not specified
    • Disease of the muscles, bones or joints
    • Trauma to limbs
    • Blindness
    • Deafness
    • Heart disease
    • Chest disease
    • Asthma
    • Cystic fibrosis
    • Cerebrovascular disease
    • Peripheral vascular disease
    • Epilepsy
    • Neurological diseases
    • Multiple sclerosis
    • Parkinson's disease
    • Motor neurone disease
    • Chronic pain syndromes
    • Diabetes mellitus
    • Metabolic disease
    • Traumatic paraplegia/tetraplegia
    • Major trauma other than traumatic paraplegia/tetraplegia
    • Learning difficulties
    • Psychosis
    • Psychoneurosis
    • Personality disorder
    • Dementia
    • Behavioural disorder
    • Alcohol and drug abuse
    • Hyperkinetic syndrome
    • Renal disorders
    • Inflammatory bowel disease
    • Bowel and stomach disease
    • Blood disorders
    • Haemophilia
    • Multi-system disorders
    • Multiple allergy syndrome
    • Skin disease
    • Malignant disease
    • Severely mentally impaired
    • Double amputee
    • Deaf/blind
    • Haemodialysis
    • Frailty
    • Total parenteral autrition
    • AIDS
    • Infectious diseases: Viral disease - coronavirus Covid-19
    • Infectious diseases: Viral disease - precise diagnosis not specified
    • Infectious diseases: Bacterial disease – tuberculosis
    • Infectious diseases: Bacterial disease – precise diagnosis not specified
    • Infectious diseases: Protozoal disease – malaria
    • Infectious diseases: Protozoal disease – other/precise diagnosis not specified
    • Infectious diseases - other/precise diagnosis not specified
    • Cognitive disorder - other/precise diagnosis not specified
    • Terminally ill.

    As well as being of state pension age, claimants must have “been in” Great Britain (England, Scotland, or Wales) for the last two years, as well as be habitually resident in the UK, Ireland, the Isle of Man, or the Channel Islands.

    Claimants must have needed help for at least six months unless the person has less than 12 months to live. Then ‘special rules’ can apply and a person qualify much more quickly for the higher rate of payment.

    According to the DWP, people also don’t need to have had a diagnosis for their condition to apply. However, Britons won't be able to get Attendance Allowance if they already receive Personal Independence Payment (PIP), Adult Disability Payment (ADP), or the care component of Disability Living Allowance (DLA).

    Attendance Allowance rates 2023

    The lower and higher payment rates are:

    • Lower rate: £68.10 per week (up from £61.85)
    • Higher rate: £101.75 per week (up from £92.40).

    People who need help during the day or at night could be eligible for the lower rate, whereas people who need help during both the day and at night or have a terminal illness, could be eligible for the higher rate.

    To claim, people need to fill out an Attendance Allowance form, which can be accessed by either calling the helpline on 0800 731 0122 or downloading it from the Government website, here.

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