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THE LATEST ON MEDICAL CARE DURING COVID-19 CRISIS

COVID-19 is here. This pandemic has spread to every corner of the United States. This is just the beginning.

The gravity of this crisis is still sinking in, when it’s over we will either be someone or know someone who has gotten sick.

This is a particularly terrifying time for individuals with disabilities and their families. Ableism in the medical community is rampant. Implicit bias toward disability is everywhere, but now, with the choices doctors are facing, it creates life or death circumstances.

A virtual conference with the American Association of People with Disabilities (AAPD) this week outlined what we are facing. Here are the major takeaways from that call which the Center for Family Involvement (CFI) participated in.

RATIONING IS ALREADY HAPPENING.

SEVERAL STATE AND REGIONAL HEALTH AUTHORITIES HAVE ISSUED DIRECTIVES THAT:

Here are some things that are already happening:

QUALITY OF LIFE IS SUBJECTIVE

It was noted that medical professionals are facing impossible choices. Hospitals are overwhelmed with bed shortages, protective gear shortages, staffing shortages.

When deciding who gets care, who gets a bed, who gets a ventilator – doctors often look to quality of life. But that is an ambiguous measurement. The public often assumes there is an objective way to measure quality of life, but there is not. You have to ask the person. Even then it’s problematic because it’s based on non-disabled norms.

Looking at a chart to decide who gets care is a complete guess; it means that younger, healthy, non-disabled patients will get prioritized care every time. Studies show time and time again that beliefs and bias cloud quality of life judgement. The majority of people with disabilities love their lives.

Who do we believe? The person themself or the person judging who has been taught that the quality of life for people with disabilities is less than?

DISABILITY RIGHTS IN THE TIME OF COVID-19

The Department of Health and Human Services’ (HHS) Office of Civil Rights has issued a bulletin stating that:

In response to these guidelines, hospitals are getting legal guidance on how to circumvent lawsuits that come about because they plan to not follow them.

WHAT WE MUST DO NOW

Panelists broke down what we need to do right now, as the crisis unfolds.

WHEN THE CRISIS IS OVER

These issues have always existed. They are magnified now because of the magnitude of this crisis. Panelists went over what we must prioritize when this is over to ensure these kind of inequities in medical treatment never happen again.

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