Litcius/Paper detail

Aspiring to Disability Consciousness in Health Professions Training

Lydia Smeltz, Susan M. Havercamp, Lisa M. Meeks

2024The AMA Journal of Ethic24 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Lack of disability-competent health care contributes to inequitable health outcomes for the largest minoritized population in the world: persons with disabilities. Health care professionals hold implicit and explicit bias against disabled people and report receiving inadequate disability training. While disability competence establishes a baseline standard of care, health professional educators must prepare a disability conscious workforce by challenging ableist assumptions and promoting holistic understanding of persons with disabilities. Future clinicians must recognize disability as an aspect of diversity, express respect for disabled patients, and demonstrate flexibility about how to care for disabled patients' needs. These skills are currently undervalued in medical training, specifically. This article describes how integrating disability consciousness into health professions training can improve health equity for patients with disabilities.

Topics & Concepts

Competence (human resources)Health careConsciousnessMedical model of disabilityPsychologyTraining (meteorology)PopulationLearning disabilityNursingMedicinePsychiatrySocial psychologyEnvironmental healthPolitical sciencePhysicsMeteorologyLawNeuroscienceGlobal Health Workforce IssuesHealthcare Policy and ManagementInnovations in Medical Education
Aspiring to Disability Consciousness in Health Professions Training | Litcius