VRDP04300 - Definitions and use of terms: meaning of ‘disabled�
What is ‘disabled�?
»Ê¹ÚÌåÓýapp word ‘disabledâ€� implies a condition of a long-term nature with a substantial adverse effect on the ability of the individual to carry out day-to-day activities and includes:
- mental disability;
- blind or visually impaired; or
- acute hearing loss,
although spectacles and hearing aids are specifically excluded from relief - see VRDP26000 and VRDP18000.
A temporary injury such as a broken limb is not a form of disability.
Is an elderly or frail person ‘disabled�?
Those who are frail simply because of old age are not considered to be disabled.
However, an elderly person might also be chronically sick or disabled.
Dyslexia and asthma
»Ê¹ÚÌåÓýapp severity of many conditions varies and some sufferers will not be disabled by the conditions whilst others are. Such conditions include dyslexia and asthma.
Where a person’s dyslexia or asthma has a substantial long term adverse effect on his/her ability to carry out normal day to day activities then he/she should be treated as being disabled for VAT purposes.
This means that not everyone with dyslexia or asthma is disabled.