LRD guides and handbook July 2021

Law at work 2021 - the trade union guide to employment law

Chapter 7

Conditions that can be corrected by medication or treatment

[ch 7: page 221]

Measures to treat or correct the adverse effects of an impairment, such as drugs or a prosthetic limb, must be ignored when deciding whether someone is disabled. There is an exception for conditions that are correctible by ordinary spectacles and contact lenses (Schedule 1 Part 1, para 5(1)(b) EA 10).

Type 2 diabetes has caused some challenges for the ET. In Metroline Travel Limited v Stoute [2015] UKEAT 0302/14/2601, the EAT ruled that Mr Stoute’s Type 2 diabetes, which was manageable by avoiding sugary food and drink, was not a disability. They reached this conclusion by drawing on Paragraph B7 of the statutory guidance on disability (see page 217) which says that sometimes coping strategies and changes in behaviour such as diet and lifestyle, can be so successful that the effect of an impairment is no longer “substantial”, meaning that the person is no longer disabled. This suggests that someone who unreasonably fails to adopt these kinds of coping strategy or behaviour changes may not be protected by the EA 10.