Journal
DISABILITY & SOCIETY
Volume 35, Issue 3, Pages 389-412Publisher
ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/09687599.2019.1647149
Keywords
Medical students with disabilities; disability; disclosure; medical education; ableism; political disclosure
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Disabled students remain underrepresented in medical education and encounter barriers in the educational environment. Analyses of disclosure tend to focus on logistical acts and suggest that students are likely to 'cover' their disabilities in order to manage others' perceptions of their capability. Using data from a grounded theory study conducted at four US medical schools, the article demonstrates how some medical students reveal their disability experiences for collective benefit and to counter stigma. These strategic acts, political disclosures, resist ableist conceptions of disability in medicine. Students described ways they disclosed politically, compelled by certain drivers: desiring belonging, connecting individual concerns to systemic problems, having certain individual attributes, and acquiring status. Against this, a sense of risk to future career and a lack of structural support hindered such acts. Structural measures to support positive identity development and address ableist culture are offered in response.
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