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Insights

News June 20, 2018

Doctors with disabilities: A case for inclusion

By Mark Conley

A greater acceptance of, and more, people with disabilities are needed in the health care workforce, physician Cheri Blauwet writes.

People with disabilities - of all sorts - go to the doctor. And it makes sense that doctors with disabilities could have an enhanced understanding of what that a patient's life is like.

Nonetheless, doctors with disabilities are rare, Cheri Blauwet, MD, writes in a recent essay in Stanford Medicine. One 2012 survey found that less than one percent of graduating medical students self-reported as disabled.

So where are those doctors? One answer is that many people hesitate to identify a disability to avoid discrimination or other consequences, Blauwet writes.

Others probably don't want to face the nearly daily reactions that Blauwet receives: "some good, some bad, all interesting."

Or, they are told - directly perhaps, or through our societal image of doctors - that medicine is not for people with disabilities.

Yet, when doctors can relate to patients, they offer a "heightened level of empathy" as well as a variety of other experiences and skills that can enrich the physician workforce.

Several initiatives are underway to make room for more doctors with disabilities, as well as to give all medical trainees a greater understanding of the challenges many patients face, Blauwet writes, calling attention to a 2018 report by the Association of American Medical Colleges.

The ultimate goal, she writes, is "to again be invisible, but in a much more empowered way. This new form of invisible would be one in which access is so ubiquitous and stigma so low that entering a patient room would not turn heads of even elicit a response. People with disabilities would, in fact, not stand out in the profession, but would rather be a common sight in all health care environments."

Image by Riki Blanco

About Stanford Medicine

Stanford Medicine is an integrated academic health system comprising the Stanford School of Medicine and adult and pediatric health care delivery systems. Together, they harness the full potential of biomedicine through collaborative research, education and clinical care for patients. For more information, please visit med.stanford.edu.

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Associate editor

Mark Conley

Associate editor Mark Conley oversees Insights and helps edit news stories for the News Center. He also reports on ethics, health policy and transplantation, among other topics. The San Francisco State graduate joined the office after a long career in journalism — the majority spent helping shepherd an award-winning sports staff at the San Jose Mercury News. He also helped launch Lookout Santa Cruz, winning the Pulitzer Prize for breaking news with coverage of the historic winter storms of 2023. When he’s not working with words, you’ll likely find him surfing or playing pickleball.