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'An £8,000 debt pushed me to breaking point'
Key takeaways
- Bereavement, redundancy, ill health and isolation all played their part and pushed him beyond breaking point.
- The 58-year-old from Bradford had worked in what he described as a "really good job" for the council before complications during routine surgery left him unable to continue.
- "I ended up losing a lot of money each month going onto benefits," he said.
Aisha Iqbalin Bradford Aisha Iqbal/BBCDean believes easy access to things like pay-later plans can compound people's debt problems rather than helping them When Dean's debts spiralled to unmanageable levels, it was not one single event that had fuelled the crisis, but an accumulation.
Bereavement, redundancy, ill health and isolation all played their part and pushed him beyond breaking point.
The 58-year-old from Bradford had worked in what he described as a "really good job" for the council before complications during routine surgery left him unable to continue.
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