Introduction to Disability and Antiableist Health Care: A Pilot, Student-Led Module for Preclinical Medical Students

Physical medicine and rehabilitation physicians often care for disabled patients, who comprise America's largest marginalized population. Despite medical students' and physicians' discomfort with caring for disabled patients and the pervasiveness of ableism in health care, medical edu...

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Published inAmerican journal of physical medicine & rehabilitation Vol. 103; no. 5; p. e54
Main Authors Smeltz, Lydia, Carpenter, Sandra, Benedetto, Lauren, Newcomb, Nora, Rubenstein, Dana, King, Tonya, Lunsford, Christopher, Shaw, Tanya, DeWaters, Ami L
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States 01.05.2024
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Summary:Physical medicine and rehabilitation physicians often care for disabled patients, who comprise America's largest marginalized population. Despite medical students' and physicians' discomfort with caring for disabled patients and the pervasiveness of ableism in health care, medical education lacks disability-focused education. Kern's approach to curriculum development and disability community input were used to design a three-part, elective curriculum for first-year medical students. Part one introduced disability models and language. Part two described how to perform a comprehensive history and physical examination for a disabled patient using ADEPT-CARE. Part three provided an overview of disability history and the disability rights movement. The curriculum's goal was to improve students' attitudes regarding disability health and self-perceived knowledge and confidence in caring for patients with disabilities. The curriculum was evaluated through presurvey and postsurvey. Students favorably reviewed the curriculum. One hundred percent of students ( n = 21) agreed or strongly agreed that the curriculum improved their knowledge of disability health, increased their perceived confidence in caring for patients with disabilities, and enhanced their medical education. There were no statistically significant differences in students' attitudes toward patients with disabilities after curriculum completion. Our asynchronous module provides one potential curriculum for increasing preclinical medical students' self-perceived knowledge of disability health.
ISSN:1537-7385
DOI:10.1097/PHM.0000000000002399