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NAWRA 3/12/04 Royal National Institute of the Blind Visual Impairment Awareness Workshop. RNIB Welfare Rights Services: what we do. Telephone advice and consultancy (0845 766 9999) Casework service (CLS specialist level) Factsheets and welfare rights newsletter
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NAWRA 3/12/04Royal National Institute of the Blind Visual Impairment Awareness Workshop
RNIB Welfare Rights Services: what we do • Telephone advice and consultancy (0845 766 9999) • Casework service (CLS specialist level) • Factsheets and welfare rights newsletter • Grants and pensions for blind and partially sighted people in hardship • Benefits training • Take up campaigns • Policy campaigns
How many people with sight loss? • Two million unable to read newsprint • One million people are eligible for registration as blind or partially sighted • One in twelve people over 60, and one in five over 75, are eligible for registration • About 350,000 people are registered blind or partially sighted
Numbers in your area • The Department of Health website www.dh.gov.uk has statistics on registered blind and partially sighted people (as at March 2003) including regional breakdowns • Estimates of the number of people eligible for registration (including regionalbreakdowns) are available from RNIB
What can blind people see? • 4 per cent of people on blind register report being ‘totally blind’ • 96 per cent can see light through a window • 75 per cent can read newspaper headlines RNIB survey 1991
Customer care • A significant proportion of your customers/clients will have a sight problem. But it may not be obvious when you first meet them. • Needs vary - ask individuals what they require • Offer information in accessible formats (RNIB’s See it Right pack gives advice) • Use a minimum of 14 point print as standard • Offer home visits and help with form-filling
Customer care • Consider people with sight problems when publicising your service and doing take up work • Aim to make your premises accessible for people with sight problems • Signpost or refer people to local societies for blind people, RNIB Helpline (0845 766 9999), etc, when appropriate • Consult with your customers and with local societies for blind people
Attendance Allowance • There are only 56,800 AA claimants whose main disabling condition is blindness. (cf 121,000 registered blind people over 65.) • Mallinson hasn’t had as much impact as hoped • Barriers to take up: think AA is only for people with physical disabilities, difficulty with form, underestimate needs
DLA/AA: tips for form completion • Allow plenty of time • Give full and detailed answers throughout the claim pack. • Use RNIB’s form-filling checklist • Be aware that customers may understate their care and mobility needs. • Remember to consider the help they need, not just the help they get.
DLA/AA: tips for form completion • Include details of spoken help, help with reading, and help needed with social and leisure activities (Halliday) • If the customer uses any special equipment, explain the equipment’s limitations. • Offer to read the completed form aloud to the customer so they can check it before signing. Offer a signature guide.
Take up work:Useful avenues • Consider using the sight registers • Local societies for blind people • Social services: Sensory Impairment Teams • Libraries (large print, audio, domiciliary services) • Eye clinics • Talking newspapers • Local radio • Think laterally - chiropodists, places of worship...
RNIB Helpline and website Helpline: 0845 766 9999 Website: www.rnib.org.uk