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Technical Standards from Newly Established Medical Schools: A Review of Disability Inclusive Practices

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SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
DOI: 10.1177/23821205211072763

关键词

medical education; accommodations; school admission criteria; medical students; technical standards; disability

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  1. Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS)

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Technical standards of US medical schools pose significant barriers to students with disabilities. Although there have been calls for more inclusive standards, the impact of these efforts is yet to be measured. Newly established medical schools in the US have more restrictive technical standards compared to previous studies, indicating a failure to achieve greater inclusivity. Future research should evaluate the role of accrediting bodies in ensuring accessible and informative technical standards that support reasonable accommodations for disabled students.
INTRODUCTION: Technical standards document US medical school's nonacademic criteria necessary for admission, persistence, and graduation and communicate the school's commitment to disability inclusion and accommodation but are considered one of the largest barriers for students with disabilities. Calls for more inclusive technical standards have increased in recent years, yet the impact of this work on changing technical standards has not been measured. The establishment of 15 new US MD- and DO-granting medical schools between 2017 to 2020 offered a unique opportunity to evaluate differences in the inclusive nature of newly developed technical standards. METHOD: We conducted a document analysis of 15 newly formed medical schools' technical standards to determine the availability and inclusive nature of the standards as they pertain to students with sensory and mobility disabilities. Technical standards were coded for: ease of obtaining technical standards, the school's stated willingness to provide reasonable accommodations, the origin of responsibility for accommodation request and implementation, and the school's openness to intermediaries or auxiliary aids. RESULTS: Of the 15 schools, 73% of the technical standards were not easy to locate online. Few (13%) included language that support disability accommodations. Most (73%) used language that was coded as 'restrictive' for students with physical or sensory disabilities. Coding of the newly accredited US MD and DO medical schools suggests that newly created technical standards are more restrictive than those in previous studies. CONCLUSIONS: Efforts to create more inclusive technical standards have not yet been realized. Newly formed US MD- and DO-granting medical schools may perpetuate historically restrictive technical standards that serve as barriers to applicants with disabilities. Future research should evaluate the role of medical school accrediting bodies to go beyond simply requiring technical standards to ensuring that the standards are readily available and appropriately convey the availability of reasonable accommodations for students with disabilities.

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