Supporting doctors with disabilities and long-term conditions

Dr Hannah Barham-Brown is a GP trainee in Yorkshire and Humber and a disability activist, she is helping to promote the BMA's new survey of doctors who are disabled or have long-term health conditions.

When I developed a disability as a medical student, I found myself questioning whether my career was over before it had even begun. Graduating in a wheelchair, I didn't know other doctors with disabilities existed, making it so hard to find my way through a training programme which can seem horrendously complicated to even the most able of juniors. 

Through my engagement with the BMA, I discovered that actually, there are many of us; but we are the oft-forgotten group. The damaging narrative of 'Superhuman' doctors seems to extend to our health; people are genuinely surprised we exist as a cohort at all, so it can feel like we are (quite literally, in some cases), reinventing the wheel with every job rotation.

Disabled doctors work just as hard as our colleagues; we just work differently. Patients tell us that our conditions can be an asset in our clinical practice; we have an added level of understanding, and an intimate knowledge of the systems our patients often have to navigate to receive care and support.

Yet we know that in the NHS, disabled staff are the group most likely to experience bullying and harassment. Despite my self-confident and forthright exterior, I have experienced these behaviours at the hands of my colleagues. On one occasion, I was pushed to tears by a surgeon I had never met asking "Should you even be in work?", as I rolled through the ED in my scrubs, getting on with my shift.

Some of us work Less Than Full Time, but that doesn't mean we aren't contributing to the NHS in different ways; I spend a lot of my non-clinical time travelling around trusts across the country, talking to them about how and why they can and should support disabled staff, and other those from other protected characteristics.

Under the Equality Act 2010, a person is considered to be 'disabled' if they have a physical or mental impairment that has a substantial and long-term adverse effect on your ability to carry out normal day-to-day activities. Under this definition, a lot of staff are likely to be considered 'disabled', and yet very few disclose this to employers.

We know that there are a variety of reasons why people, like me, choose General Practice. One of those may be the potential for portfolio work, supporting those of us who struggle to physically work clinically full time.

So how can you help this cohort of doctors? The BMA are carrying out a survey of disabled doctors and medical students to find out about their experiences in medical education, training and work, and their perceptions of the support they receive from their place of work, their place of study, and from the BMA. This will enable us to focus our efforts on tackling the issues that disabled doctors and medical students believe would make the greatest difference to their professional lives. 

Please, if you are disabled or have a long-term condition, complete the survey, and if not, please share it with colleagues and friends. It could really help the medical students and doctors of the future.

The survey is online here and the BMA’s resources for disabled doctors and medical students are here.

Last updated : 16 Dec 2019

 

Keeping true to our values while under pressure (26 Apr 2017)

Ahead of our annual conference: 'Under Pressure: stabilise, transform, and sustain general practice for London', Dr Michelle Drage takes a look at some of the challenges facing London general practice....
Read more »

Half day closing and extended hours (25 Apr 2017)

Section 4 Part 9 of the Primary Medical Services (DES) Directions 2017/2018 indicates that from October 2017 practices that regularly close for a half day, on a weekly basis, will...
Read more »

Submission to APPG enquiry on demand in primary care (22 Apr 2017)

We have now submitted our response to the All-Party Parliamentary Group (APPG) on Primary Care and Public Health’s inquiry into managing demand in primary care. Our submission focused on the following...
Read more »

Guest blog: how can the new GP Retention Scheme help you and your colleagues (22 Apr 2017)

Our Medical Director Dr Vicky Weeks looks at the new GP Retention Scheme, which she helped negotiate as a member of the BMA’s Sessional GPs’ subcommittee. Overworked? Exhausted and can’t...
Read more »

New locum pension forms for 2017-18 (22 Apr 2017)

The Employers contribution for the NHS Pension scheme has increased from 14.3% to 14.38% as of 1 April 2017. The NHS Pension Agency is has issued new Locum A and B...
Read more »

Changes to the 2017/19 NHS Standard Contract (22 Apr 2017)

NHS England has accepted a number of changes for the new NHS Standard Contract, most notably: Results of investigations requested by hospital clinicians should be communicated by the hospital...
Read more »

Deprivation of Liberty Safeguards deaths - automatic coroner referrals end (04 Apr 2017)

From Monday 3 April 2017, it is no longer necessary to refer all patients who die while subject to an authorisation under the Deprivation of Liberty Safeguards (DoLS) to the...
Read more »

Practice managers - is your appraisal useful? Do you feel valued? (23 Mar 2017)

Practice managers have been recognised in the General Practice Forward View and NHS England have funded a new project to train practice managers to be appraisers. Londonwide LMCs is pleased...
Read more »

Budget 2017 (22 Mar 2017)

Rt Hon Theresa May MP’s first and final Spring 2017 Budget as PM was delivered on Wednesday 8 March. Future Budget statements will be delivered in the Autumn to allow...
Read more »
Next Page »
« Previous Page