The health system revealed at the Disability Royal Commission

by | Mar 9, 2020 | Blog

The third public hearing of the Disability Royal Commission heard from a wide range of people with disability, advocates, families and academics, who all told of failures in health care that are leading to the deaths of disabled people.

The hearing heard directly from people with intellectual disability about what they had experienced, and how they had been treated.

A great way to catch up on the hearings is in the daily blogs from the NSW Council on Intellectual Disability. Another way is to look at the transcripts and videos on the Disability Royal Commission website.

I wrote for Eureka Street about the hearing, and the medical model of disability.

Saying the medical system runs on the medical model of disability seems self evident, and yet that’s at the heart of much of what has been talked about in these latest hearings. The medical model locates the ‘problem’ of disability firmly in the disabled person, and the expertise to fix that ‘problem’ within the health professional and health system. The disability rights movement has long fought for a social model of disability to be at the heart of how we think about ourselves — what would a social model of health care look like?

Other Articles

Lived expertise means experts

Lived expertise means experts

The need to include people with lived experience of an issue, such as disability, is becoming standard, but what does this really mean? Are we to be included to talk about only our personal stories, or are we to be included so our expertise in the systems and...

read more
Disability employment on the agenda

Disability employment on the agenda

The new Federal Government is holding a Disability Employment Roundtable this week, after having a Jobs and Skills forum with disabled people last week. So what should be on the agenda to get actual change for disabled people excluded from employment? As always,...

read more