In August 2015, the department admitted using fictional stories from made-up claimants on leaflets advertising the positive impact of benefit sanctions, following a
Freedom of Information request from
Welfare Weekly, claiming that they were for "illustrative purposes only" and that it was "quite wrong" to pass these off as genuine quotes. Later that month figures were released which showed that between December 2011 and February 2014, 2,650 people died shortly after their Work Capability Assessment told them that they should be finding work. The DWP had fought hard for the figures not to be released, with chief minister
Iain Duncan Smith at one point telling Parliament that they did not exist. In 2019, a computer system was introduced but the DWP refused to reveal details. Claimants and their supporters feared it would add to poverty and hardship.
Frank Field MP stated in early 2020 that claimants, "will be left at the mercy of online systems that, even now, leave all too many people teetering on the brink of destitution. We've already seen, in the gig economy, how workers are managed and sacked, not by people, but by algorithms. Now the welfare state looks set to follow suit, with the 'social' human element being stripped away from 'social security'." In 2019, the department was found by an independent inquiry to have broken its own rules, in a case where a disabled woman killed herself in 2017 after her benefits were stopped when she missed a
Work Capability Assessment because she had pneumonia. Previous research published in the
Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health by
Oxford University and
Liverpool University had found that there were an additional 590
suicides between 2010 and 2013 in areas where such assessments were carried out. The researchers said that the DWP had introduced the policy of moving people off benefits without understanding the consequences. In 2022 the department refused to release data to researchers at
Glasgow University who were investigating if benefit sanctions were linked to suicides. This was despite earlier promises by ministers that they were supporting the researchers. ==See also==