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Vaccine Damage Payment

Find out who is eligible for Vaccine Damage Payment, how to make a claim for yourself or for a dependent child and what effects a payment can have on other benefits.

Eligibility

You may be able to get a Vaccine Damage Payment if you are severely disabled and your disability was caused by vaccination against any of these diseases:

  • diphtheria
  • tetanus
  • pertussis (whooping cough)
  • poliomyelitis
  • measles
  • mumps
  • rubella (German measles)
  • tuberculosis (TB)
  • haemophilus influenzae type B (HIB)
  • meningococcal group C (meningitis C)
  • pneumococcal infection
  • human papillomavirus
  • smallpox (up to 1 August 1971)

You may have had a combined vaccination against a number of the diseases listed, for example DTP (diphtheria, tetanus and pertussis) or MMR (measles, mumps and rubella).

You may also be able to get a payment if you are thought to be severely disabled because either:

  • your mother was vaccinated against one of the diseases in the list while she was pregnant
  • you have been in close physical contact with someone who has been vaccinated against poliomyelitis with a vaccine that was given orally

What is 'severely disabled'?

Disablement is worked out as a percentage, and 'severe disablement' is defined as a disability of at least 60 per cent. This could be a mental or physical disability.

For example, total loss of sight or hearing is usually counted as a 100 per cent disablement.

When and where the vaccination must have taken place

To be eligible for Vaccine Damage Payment, you must normally have been vaccinated before your 18th birthday, unless it was against poliomyelitis, rubella, Meningococcal Group C or human papillomavirus, or during an outbreak of disease in the UK or the Isle of Man.

The vaccination must have been given in the UK or the Isle of Man.

If the vaccination was given outside the UK, you may still be able to get a payment if you were vaccinated as part of Armed Forces medical treatment.

When to claim

If you are claiming on behalf of a child, you must wait until they are at least two years old before claiming.

The claim must be made by the later of the following dates:

  • the disabled person's 21st birthday (or, if they have died, the date on which they would have turned 21)
  • within six years of the date the vaccination took place

How much you get

The amount is £120,000, tax free.

How it is paid

A payment will be made to you or, if you are under 18 or cannot manage your own affairs, to your trustees.

If you live with your family, your parents may be appointed as trustees.

Effect on other benefits

Your Vaccine Damage Payment can affect other benefits and entitlements like:

  • Income Support
  • Income-based Jobseeker's Allowance
  • Employment and Support Allowance
  • Working Tax Credit
  • Child Tax Credit
  • Pension Credit
  • Housing Benefit
  • Council Tax Benefit

The effect the payment will have depends on a number of things, including whether the payment is put into a trust and the payments made from it.

You should let the office that deals with your benefit or tax credit claim know if you have got a Vaccine Damage Payment. They will be able give you more information and advice.

How to claim

You can contact the Vaccine Damage Payments Unit to ask for a claim form:

Vaccine Damage Payments Unit

Palatine House, Lancaster Road

Preston, PR1 1HB

Telephone: 01772 899944

Textphone: 01772 562202

Lines are open from 8.30 am to 5.00 pm, Monday to Thursday, and 8.30 am to 4.30 pm on Friday. You can also call using RNID Typetalk.

Alternatively, you can download a claim form to print off and fill in.

If you are under 18, your parent or guardian should claim on your behalf.

What happens after you have sent off the claim form

Once your claim has been received, the Vaccine Damage Payments Unit will get medical evidence from the doctors or hospitals involved in your treatment.

A claim will be successful if it is accepted that:

  • your disablement was caused by vaccination
  • the level of your disablement that can be directly attributed to the vaccination is at least 60 per cent

The result of the claim will be given to you in writing.

How to appeal

If your claim is turned down and you disagree with the decision, you can ask for the decision to be looked at again by the Vaccine Damage Payments Unit, or you can appeal to an independent appeal tribunal.

If you think that relevant information has not been taken into account or new information becomes available you can ask for the decision to be looked at again by the Vaccine Damage Payments Unit.

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