21.2 MAJORITY REPORT. (Kinnear, Q. 23,689-690, 23,781). We may also point out that there are other illnesses, such as neurasthenia, in respect of which an almost equally strong case could be made for a similar concession. Any modification of the kind suggested would add seriously to the difficulties attending medical certification and the determination of claims for benefit. We accordingly do not think that this suggestion for the special case of the tuberculous persons can be recommended. MeDICAL CERTIFICATION. 504. It is indispensable to the proper administration of sickness and disablement benefits that the incapacity of the insured person who is claiming benefit should be medically certified at frequent intervals, and the provision of certificates is accordingly one of the duties undertaken by the insurance practitioners under their contracts with the Insurance Committees. Under the present arrangements a certificate is supplied at the outset of incapacity, a second, if necessary, after not more than seven days, and there- after once weekly ; but in cases of prolonged incapacity, where the doctor does not regard it as necessary to see the patient more freqiently than once in four weeks, it is open to him, with the concurrence of the Society, to give certificates separated by this interval. 505. Tt has been submitted to us in the evidence of the British Medical Association that these periods should be extended at the option of the practitioner to 14 days in the case of sickness benefit and 42 days (or in rural areas three months) in the case of disablement benefit (App. XLVII, 53). In examination, it appeared that proposals to this effect had been made by the profession to the Approved Societies but had not been accepted. We have not ourselves thought it necessary to recall witnesses from the Societies to give evidence upon the point, in view of the facts which were brought out in the investigations of the Actuarial Committee. These facts, had they been available to the profession when its proposals were being formulated must. we think, have raised in the minds of the medical witnesses the same doubts as to the wisdom of this proposal as they have in ours. The First Report of the Actuarial Committee shows, as we have elsewhere explained, a constant and serious rise in the sickness claims of women and in the disablement claims of both sexes; and it is pointed out, moreover, in the Appendix to that Report (para. 11), that of those who receive disablement benefit in the course of a year, a large proportion rising, at the ages under 40, to 40-50 per cent., ** go off the funds’ during the year, thus showing that those in receipt of this benefit at any time are, as a class, very far from being a body of permanently sick persons. In these circumstances the need seems to be for more. rather than less. supervision, and it is impossible for us