
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
Title of Featured Article: Addressing Ableism in Physician Well-Being Planning
Citation:
Quon, Michael. 2024. “Addressing Ableism in Physician Well-Being Planning.” JAMA 332 (4): 275–76. https://doi.org/10.1001/jama.2024.7736.
Authors: Michael Quon
Transcript:
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1rm5hiHNrxW0Gbs141BmLIPm48xvR_l9d/edit?usp=drive_link&ouid=107682871199975293144&rtpof=true&sd=true
Summary:
Research and Resource Rounds episode 20 discusses Dr. Michael Quon's thoughtful assessment of the National Academy of Medicine's National Plan for Health Workforce Well-Being. At the plan’s core is a contradiction: while the plan aims to combat physician burnout and promote wellness, it systematically ignores the needs of disabled physicians. Quon identifies a pattern of structural ableism throughout the plan's recommendations. Disability is treated as a temporary problem requiring management rather than an ongoing aspect of professional diversity requiring sustained workplace accommodations; temporary injury and short-term accommodations are forefronted in the plan while long-term accommodations that facilitate disabled doctors’ enduring career of medical practice are overlooked. Quon advocates for fundamental shifts: accommodation policies that don't require disclosure, improved licensing processes, integration of disability experts into leadership, and recognition that disabled physicians bring unique value to patient care through their lived experiences.
Keywords:
Well-being, Ableism, Medical Education, Implicit bias, Explicit bias, Disability, medicine, medical training, National Academy of Medicine, physicians with disabilities, accommodations
Producer: Zoey Martin Lockhart, Lisa Meeks
Audio Engineer: Jacob Feeman
Release: July 2025
Title of Featured Article: Addressing Ableism in Physician Well-Being Planning
Citation:
Quon, Michael. 2024. “Addressing Ableism in Physician Well-Being Planning.” JAMA 332 (4): 275–76. https://doi.org/10.1001/jama.2024.7736.
Authors: Michael Quon
Transcript:
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1rm5hiHNrxW0Gbs141BmLIPm48xvR_l9d/edit?usp=drive_link&ouid=107682871199975293144&rtpof=true&sd=true
Summary:
Research and Resource Rounds episode 20 discusses Dr. Michael Quon's thoughtful assessment of the National Academy of Medicine's National Plan for Health Workforce Well-Being. At the plan’s core is a contradiction: while the plan aims to combat physician burnout and promote wellness, it systematically ignores the needs of disabled physicians. Quon identifies a pattern of structural ableism throughout the plan's recommendations. Disability is treated as a temporary problem requiring management rather than an ongoing aspect of professional diversity requiring sustained workplace accommodations; temporary injury and short-term accommodations are forefronted in the plan while long-term accommodations that facilitate disabled doctors’ enduring career of medical practice are overlooked. Quon advocates for fundamental shifts: accommodation policies that don't require disclosure, improved licensing processes, integration of disability experts into leadership, and recognition that disabled physicians bring unique value to patient care through their lived experiences.
Keywords:
Well-being, Ableism, Medical Education, Implicit bias, Explicit bias, Disability, medicine, medical training, National Academy of Medicine, physicians with disabilities, accommodations
Producer: Zoey Martin Lockhart, Lisa Meeks
Audio Engineer: Jacob Feeman
Release: July 2025