What evidence are you submitting as part of your appeal?
Evidence is really important, as the Proctors will only determine your appeal outcome based on the statement and evidence you put forward. They won't do any investigation themselves to find additional evidence to support your appeal.
For each piece of evidence, you should rename it as the Annex number it is, and a brief description. E.g. Annex A, email from DGS. On the form, for each piece of evidence you are providing you should give a brief description, explain who authored it (e.g. yourself, your doctor, your DGS), the date it was created and how it is relevant to your appeal. For example, does it show a process wasn't followed correctly?
To make it as easy as possible for the Proctors to understand the relevance of each of your pieces of evidence, in your main statement when you are explaining something which is evidence, you should write (see: annex xyz).
If you have more than five pieces of evidence, then you can add additional rows. However, be careful to ensure that every piece of evidence is complete, relevant and proportionate. Therefore, be concise in what you are presenting whilst ensuring the whole picture is showcased.