Litcius/Paper detail

When Disability Is Defined by Behavior, Outcome Measures Should Not Promote “Passing”

Ari Ne’eman

2021The AMA Journal of Ethic51 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

When disability is defined by behavior, researchers and clinicians struggle to identify appropriate measures to assess clinical progress. Some choose the reduction or elimination of diagnostic traits, implicitly defining typical appearance as the goal of service provision. Such an approach often interferes with more meaningful, person-centered goals; causes harm to people with disabilities; and is unnecessary for dealing with traits that are intrinsically harmful or personally distressing, such as self-injury. Disability stakeholders should reevaluate outcome measures that seek to eliminate disability-related traits that are stigmatized but not harmful. Using autism and the emergent neurodiversity movement as a case study, this article explores ethical challenges in selecting outcome measures in behaviorally defined disability diagnoses.

Topics & Concepts

PsychologyHarmOutcome (game theory)Intellectual disabilityMedical model of disabilityDistressingAutismClinical psychologyDevelopmental psychologySocial psychologyPsychiatryPhysical chemistryChemistryMathematical economicsMathematicsAutism Spectrum Disorder ResearchBehavioral and Psychological StudiesFamily and Disability Support Research
When Disability Is Defined by Behavior, Outcome Measures Should Not Promote “Passing” | Litcius