Theoretical Models of Disability (1.A 40%) Flashcards
Provide perspectives and frameworks to understand disability. None are comprehensive, so they can be neither fully correct nor incorrect. Each has strengths and limitations.
Medical Model of Disability
Disability is an individual problem of the person, directly caused by disease, trauma, or health condition, requiring medical care (treatment by professionals).
Management: Focus: Medical care. A person must be diagnosed, cured - if possible - or medically managing symptoms. Heavy emphasis on individual treatment, essentially trying to remove or mask the abnormality as much as possible to fit person into society.
Responsibility of individual and medical professionals.
Characteristics of Medical Model
- Different schools
- Different transportation
- Different house designs
- Back entrance to buildings
- Less desirable jobs
- Fewer opportunities
- Lower expectations
- Social workers
- Therapists
- Specialists
- Physicians
Strengths of the Medical Model
- Addresses the biological aspects of disability, either by clinical cure or by providing ways to medically manage conditions. The medical component is a critical reality for many.
- Clearly defined criteria to diagnosis & treat conditions helps inform decisions for who receives government assistance.
Weaknesses of the Medical Model
- Treats disability as an individual problem. Seeks cure or medical management of bodily condition.
- Overlooks issues caused by unwelcome or inaccessible environments or “broader sociopolitical constraints including attitudes, policies, and (lack of) regulations.”
- People feel excluded, undervalued, and pressure to fit questionable norm.
- Perception as abnormality or defect contributes to stigma, which has a psychological impact.
- People that don’t fit clearly-defined definitions may be denied benefits they need.
Social Model of Disability
In contrast to the Medical Model, disability is a socially created problem that hinders individuals’ full participation in society. It isn’t an individual attribute but a complex collection of conditions (social attitudes, physical environments, and systemic discrimination) that contribute to the disabling social environment.
Management: Social action. Collective responsibility of society to improve the social environment for the full participation of PWD in all areas of social life. (Equal access is a human rights issue.)
Characteristics of Social Model
- Integrated schools
- Accessible transportation
- Accessible houses
- Equal access to buildings
- Choice of jobs
- Opportunities for all
- Higher Expectations
- Public planners
- Product designers
- Architects
- Web designers
Strengths of the Social Model
- Emphasizes that barriers and challenges experienced by PWD are not inevitable, nor exclusive characteristic of an individual’s “broken” body.
- Societies can improve the world through designs that accommodate a wider variety of bodies and abilities.
Weaknesses of the Social Model
- Can downplay the embodied aspects of disability.
- Push for social justice can create political antagonism and adversaries.
Biopsychosocial Model of Disability
(George Engel, 1977): Recognizes interaction between biological, psychological (thoughts, emotions, fear, beliefs, coping methods), and social (economic and environmental factors like work issues, family circumstances, benefits/economics) factors to determine disability.
(Holistic approach)
Strengths of the Biopsychosocial Model
- Takes into account multiple facets of disability: biological, psychological, and social.
- Good for rehabilitation situations. Team integrates participation-based approach w/ health and social care professionals to develop a support intervention that accounts for one’s medical and social situation.
Weaknesses of the Biopsychosocial Model
- People fear the combination of health aspects and social factors leading to a disability definition only as a result of societal factors, thus downplaying PWD’s medical needs.
- Complex classification, which could lead to difficulties in implementation.
Economic Model of Disability
Defines disability by a person’s inability to participate in work and the degree to which impairment affects an individual’s productivity and the economic consequences for the individual, employer, and state.
Consequences: Loss of earnings for and payment for assistance by the individual, lower profit margins for the employer, and state welfare payments.
Which disability model is used by policymakers to determine and assess disability benefits?
Economic Model
The Economic Model is directly related to which Model of Disability?
Charity/Tragedy Model
Strengths of the Economic Model
- Recognizes bodily limitations affect a person’s ability to work.
- May require economic support and/or accommodations.