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    Home»Health»Norfolk chef on dialysis says Pip is not targeting right people
    Health

    Norfolk chef on dialysis says Pip is not targeting right people

    By Emma ReynoldsAugust 19, 2025No Comments5 Mins Read
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    Norfolk chef on dialysis says Pip is not targeting right people
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    Nikki Fox

    BBC health correspondent, East of England

    JOHN FAIRHALL/BBC Tony Henderson sitting in his living room undergoing home dialysis. His dialysis machine is to his left and you can see tubes running into his left arm. You can see him applying pressure to his left arm with his right arm at the fistula site. Mr Henderson is wearing a royal blue polo shirt and has glasses on.JOHN FAIRHALL/BBC

    Tony Henderson is taking the Department of Work and Pension to a tribunal after being refused personal independence payments

    A man living with kidney failure said the system for personal independence payments (Pip) was not fit for purpose after he was rejected for the benefit twice.

    Tony Henderson, 55, from Bacton, Norfolk, has dialysis for about four hours a day, six days a week, and has had three heart attacks in 12 months due to strain being put on his heart from blood being pumped around his body.

    Despite the government reversing plans to tighten eligibility criteria for Pip in July, Mr Henderson said that the “tick-box system” was still not “targeting the right people”.

    The Department of Work and Pensions said an ongoing review would ensure Pip was “fit and fair for the future”.

    Pip is paid to people in England and Wales who have difficulty completing everyday tasks or getting around as a result of a long-term physical or mental health condition.

    JOHN FAIRHALL/BBC Tony Henderson with his wife Sarah sitting outside their house in Bacton in Norfolk. He is wearing a royal blue polo shirt and he has his arm around his wife's shoulders who is wearing an olive green shirt. JOHN FAIRHALL/BBC

    Sarah Henderson donated a kidney to her husband, but his body later rejected it

    Mr Henderson’s kidneys first failed in 1998 after a routine medical discovered protein in his urine.

    He received a donor kidney from his wife, Sarah, which his body rejected. A second donor kidney failed in 2020, and he has been on dialysis since.

    Some people with kidney failure cannot urinate, so a machine cleans the body of toxins and excess fluid.

    Mr Henderson, who has worked as a chef for 40 years, is on 20 medications and currently works three days a week.

    After being turned down for Pip, he has been concerned he may have to work more days.

    “It’s the fatigue it’s the not knowing day-to-day what you’re going to be like,” he said.

    “When you come off [dialysis], you don’t really want to do anything for a while. You just want to reset.

    “Pip would be the only thing that I could get that would help me not have to worry about having to take on more hours,” he added.

    JOHN FAIRHALL/BBC Mr Henderson's left hand close up. You can see blood passing through tubes into his arm while he is undergoing dialysis. He has a red dialysis awareness wristband on his hand. He is putting pressure on his left hand on his right hand because it is bleeding, you can't see the blood from this.JOHN FAIRHALL/BBC

    Mr Henderson said because he was on blood thinners he had issues with his transfusion site bleeding

    He said not being eligible for the benefit was “disappointing and very frustrating”, especially as he had received it while previously living in Hertfordshire.

    “I’m actually three times as bad, health-wise and apparently [the government hasn’t] changed the criteria,” he said.

    “I’d work 50-55 hours, now I can barely struggle to do 25,” he said.

    “I don’t want to give up work because it’s part of who I am, and I enjoy my job,” he added.

    He said he now cannot stand for 10 hours, but his employer had been “brilliant” and given him a chair and allowed him regular breaks.

    Mr Henderson said he would work full-time if he had a kidney transplant, but that looked to be a long way off as he had to be “operation free” for a year.

    NIKKI FOX/BBC Tony Henderson is in chef's clothing. A black chef's jacket and a striped pinny. He is standing in front of an open fireplace where they cook meat at the Gunton Arms near Cromer. He is standing in front of a green chopping board and is chopping onions. Tony often works in a customer facing position cooking meat. His left arm has an elasticated armband on it to protect his arm where the transfusion fistula goes into his arm.NIKKI FOX/BBC

    Mr Henderson works at The Gunton Arms near Cromer as a chef and he wears a armband to protect his arm for transfusions

    Mr Henderson said shortly after being turned down for Pip, he had his first heart attack and had two further heart attacks when he was attached to a dialysis machine.

    He then appealed the decision in March and was again refused the benefit after a telephone assessment.

    Mr Henderson said he had been waiting five months for a tribunal date to challenge the decision.

    “No-one seemed to know during my last appraisal what dialysis actually was or how it makes you feel,” he said.

    ‘Smack in the face’

    His wife, Sarah Henderson said she felt there was not enough awareness of kidney failure.

    “A lot of people think it’s down to drinking too much or an unhealthy lifestyle and it’s not,” she said.

    She called the decision to deny her husband Pip a “smack in the face”.

    “We’ve both worked since we left school. We’ve both contributed, paid all the national insurance and tax.

    “When we really need it, we’re now not getting any help at all. We’re told he’s not unwell enough and he’s too independent.

    “It makes me angry because I know the more he does, the worse he feels,” she said.

    “I think if [Tony] said… he couldn’t go to work, if he said he couldn’t drive any more, he’d probably stand a good chance of getting it. We’re just too honest.

    “He’s getting penalised for going to work, even though it makes his mental health better.. the whole Pip system needs to change,” she said.

    Department of Work and Pensions Minister for disability health and work, Sir Stephen Timms looks at the camera in front of a plain grey background. He is wearing a red tie to represent his position in the Labour party and is wearing a grey suit with a pin striped, white shirt. He has brown hair swept to one side.Department of Work and Pensions

    Disabilities minister Sir Stephen Timms says the review of Pip is not intended to deliver cuts

    A review of Pip assessments is being led by disabilities minister Sir Stephen Timms and is expected to conclude in 2026.

    Fiona Loud, the policy director for the charity Kidney Care UK, said she heard from people who had been turned down for the benefit and hoped they would be involved in the review.

    “Once your kidneys are failing, you feel frequently sick, you will be absolutely exhausted most of the time and your bones ache, you may be swollen and breathless and on a restricted diet.

    “If you are on dialysis you use more electricity and water which also affects your income.”

    She said the current Pip system did not support people with “the compassion and dignity” that they needed.

    A Department for Work and Pensions spokesperson said: “We cannot comment on ongoing legal action [Mr Henderson’s tribunal appeal].

    “We are changing the social security system so it helps people to live with dignity, genuinely supporting those who can work into employment and ensuring the safety net will always be there for the most vulnerable – and puts the spiralling welfare bill on a more sustainable footing.”

    Chef dialysis Norfolk people Pip targeting
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    Emma Reynolds
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    Emma Reynolds is a senior journalist at Mirror Brief, covering world affairs, politics, and cultural trends for over eight years. She is passionate about unbiased reporting and delivering in-depth stories that matter.

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