International Practice Development Journal

 

Title of ArticleInability or lack of opportunity?
Type of ArticleIdeas and Influences
Author/sRuth Northway
ReferenceVolume 4, Issue 2, Article 9
Date of PublicationNovember 2014
DOIhttps://doi.org/10.19043/ipdj.42.009
Keywordsdisability, reasonable adjustments, social model

If I were to identify the idea that has most significantly impacted on my practice to date it would have to be the social model of disability. Having trained as a learning disability nurse in the early 1980s, I thought I understood ‘disability’ – but rather than critically examining its meaning(s), I had internalised dominant individual/medical models of disability that see individual impairments as causing disability. For example, I had not questioned why people with learning disabilities had experienced research undertaken ‘on’ them but not ‘with’ them: it seemed obvious that they would be unable actually to ‘do’ research.

Starting my PhD a decade later, I began to explore my assumptions more critically and encountered the social model of disability. Rather than stating that people with impairments are unable to do things, it argues that they are prevented from participating in activities by a range of social, psychological, economic and environmental barriers. First articulated by the Union of the Physically Impaired Against Segregation (1976), the social model was further developed by authors such as Abberley (1987) and Oliver (1990).

What most struck me about this model were its very practical implications for both nursing research and practice.  In terms of my research, it has lead me to identify, challenge and remove barriers that might prevent people with learning disabilities from being active participants in research that affects their lives. However, the social model of disability is equally helpful in informing practice. For example, is the patient you are supporting unable to understand the information they have been given (and therefore to provide consent) or is it that they are unable to understand the information in the format you have provided? Could perhaps the use of a larger font, pictorial information, removal of jargon or having someone to read through the information with them promote understanding? Similarly, is a person with autistic spectrum disorder unable to attend an outpatient appointment because they refuse to come into the waiting room or do they feel unable to enter the waiting room because it is noisy, with a lot of people and bright lights? Would it help to offer the first appointment of the day or a quieter, less stressful environment in which they would feel comfortable?

 

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This article by Ruth Northway is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial 3.0 License.

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