92-year-old woman with dementia ordered to pay back £7,000 by DWP after error

18 April 2024, 14:29 | Updated: 18 April 2024, 14:37

A 92-year-old woman has been ordered to repay more than £7,000 to the DWP
The daughter of the elderly woman has called the decision "outrageous" . Picture: Getty Images/Alamy

By Flaminia Luck

The daughter of a 92-year-old woman with advanced Parkinson’s and dementia has slammed the "outrageous" decision to repay more than £7,000 to the DWP over an error five years ago.

Listen to this article

Loading audio...

Rose Chitseko told The Guardian her mother, who turns 93 in April, has been ordered to pay more than a third of her life savings – after she failed to notify it about a change in her circumstances when she was in the early stages of dementia.

In 2019, Ms Chitseko began receiving £64.60 a week in carer’s allowance to look after her 88-year-old mother when she became unable to care for herself.

The Department for Work and Pensions’ (DWP) rules state the grandmother-of-four should have informed them at this point that she was no longer eligible for the severe disability premium part of the pensions credit she received. But because of her illness, she didn't.

Read more: DWP seizes devastated woman’s £16,000 inheritance because she worked at supermarket while caring for mum

Department For Work And Pensions
Department For Work And Pensions. Picture: Getty

Ms Chitseko, a former adult social care worker, said it wasn't "realistic" of her to notify the DWP.

“She’d had Parkinson’s for seven years. We were setting up power of attorney because she was already losing her grip on her ability to manage her affairs.”

In 2022, the DWP contacted Ms Chitseko’s mother – who had deteriorated further – to say that she had been overpaid more than £8,000 in pensions credit and would have to pay it back.

With the help of the Harlow Advice Centre, Ms Chitseko appealed against the penalty and asked the government to use its discretion to write off the debt as her mother “wasn’t in a fit state to notify them and didn’t realise she had to notify them”.

The final bill was reduced slightly to £7,135.08 to cover the period when carer’s allowance was being received, rather than when it was applied for, but that was the DWP’s only concession.

'Upsetting and frustrating'

“It just so outrageous, really, that they choose to persecute a frail, sick old woman for what to them is a relatively small amount – for something that she was not capable of managing,” said Chitseko.

“When the super-rich get away with millions, it’s the injustice of it, the unfairness of it. It’s just really upsetting and frustrating”.

Ms Chitseko’s mother, a former laboratory technician, is paying off the DWP penalty from her £20,000 life savings and in £600 chunks from her monthly pension.

Ms Chitseko said she could not bring herself to tell her mother what the DWP had ordered.

“I felt she couldn’t deal with it,” she said.

“For her, £7,000 is a huge sum. She’s from the wartime generation, where £100 is a lot.“If she knew that this amount of her life savings was being asked for … From her point of view, she would feel as if she was the guilty party. It would be extremely upsetting.”

After being contacted by the Guardian, the DWP said it was “reviewing this case as a matter of urgency” and had suspended repayments.

It added: “When recovering overpayments, we carefully balance our duty to protect the public purse with helping individuals manage their repayments – with strong safeguards in place.”

Read more: Tory MP suspended after claims he used party funds to pay for matter of 'life and death' escape from 'bad people'

April 22, 2023, London, United Kingdom: A sign outside Department for Work and Pension in central London. (Credit Image: © Steve Taylor/SOPA Images via ZUMA Press Wire) EDITORIAL USAGE ONLY! Not for Commercial USAGE!
April 22, 2023, London, United Kingdom: A sign outside Department for Work and Pension in central London. (Credit Image: © Steve Taylor/SOPA Images via ZUMA Press Wire) EDITORIAL USAGE ONLY! Not for Commercial USAGE! Picture: Alamy

Earlier this month, the government faced criticism after seizing a woman’s £16,000 inheritance because she was overpaid her carer’s allowance while looking after her mum.

Vivienne Groom, 59, was prosecuted for failing to declare her minimum wage job at the Co-op while also caring for her mum over five years.

Ms Groom said she was told by a social worker she did not have to declare the income to the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP).

However, after the DWP discovered she had a job at the store in Tarvin, near Chester, she was ordered to pay back £16,800.

Read more: Brexit has ‘exacerbated’ UK drug shortages with supply 'broken', research finds

More Latest News

See more More Latest News

Police have raided Columbia and UCLA, where violence has broken out

Chaos on campus: Police raid UCLA and Columbia universities as 'horrific violence' breaks out at Gaza protest in LA

An aerial photo of the scene

At least 24 killed in highway collapse in southern China

New York City police enter an upper floor of Columbia University's Hamilton Hall

Police clear pro-Palestinian protesters from Columbia University

Breaking
Breaking News

Teenager arrested after three attacked 'with sharp object' at school in Sheffield

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken shakes hands with Israeli President Isaac Herzog

Blinken tells Israeli leaders ‘the time is now’ for ceasefire in Gaza

A police officer has been charged with two counts of publishing an image in support of the proscribed organisation Hamas.

Police officer charged under Terrorism Act with 'publishing images in support of Hamas'

Samir Geagea

Lebanese Christian leader slams Hezbollah over fighting with Israel

Mark Rowley has addressed the mystery behind Jill Dando's death

Met chief gives update on Jill Dando murder 25 years after her death

Met chief Sir Mark Rowley has said that anyone using a 'swastika in the context of the Middle East crisis' will be arrested.

Met police chief pledges to arrest protesters using swastikas at Gaza protests

Exclusive
Kemi Badenoch has said there is 'no free way to police our borders' after a failed asylum seeker was given £3,000

'No free way to police our borders', Badenoch says, after first migrant sent to Rwanda with £3,000 in taxpayer money

Indonesia's Mount Ruang volcano erupts

Indonesia’s Mount Ruang volcano spews more hot clouds

Vanessa Feltz joins LBC to present new Saturday show, telling listeners to ‘brace yourselves!’

Vanessa Feltz joins LBC to present new Saturday show, telling listeners to ‘brace yourselves!’

Exclusive
Sir Mark Rowley said he would increase stop and search

Met police to increase stop and search, with announcement coming 'in next couple of months', commissioner says

Sir Mark Rowley said filming interactions with police at protests had become "intrusive".

Filming police at protests is 'physically intrusive' and 'escalates situations', says Met Commissioner

Exclusive
Kemi Badenoch has launched a 'call for input'.

Gender-neutral toilets could lead to ‘schoolgirls getting UTIs because they don't want to share’, minister says

Exclusive
Met police commissioner Sir Mark Rowley spoke on LBC on Wednesday

Met chief says officers 'were on the ground in 12 minutes' then suffered ‘horrific injuries’ in Hainault attacks