Medical Education and Disability Studies
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Therese Jones
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Abstract
Abstract The biomedicalist conceptualization of disablement as a personal medical tragedy has been criticized by disability studies scholars for discounting the difference between disability and impairment and the ways disability is produced by socio-environmental factors. This paper discusses prospects for partnerships between disability studies teaching/research and medical education; addresses some of the themes around the necessity of critical disability studies training for medical students; and examines a selection of issues and themes that have arisen from disability education courses within medical schools globally. The paper concludes that providing there is a commitment from senior management, universities are well positioned to apply both vertical and horizontal approaches to teaching disability studies to medical students. Keywords Disability studies - Medical education - Social relations of disability - Disability narratives
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Journal of Medical Humanities
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30
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4
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Medicine, Nursing and Health Curriculum and Pedagogy
Philosophy