- cross-posted to:
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- cross-posted to:
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- [email protected]
Oliver McGowan was 18 years old when he was hospitalized in England with recurrent seizures and pneumonia. He was autistic, and he and his parents had one specific request for the medical team: no antipsychotic medications. When he had taken them in the past, they made his seizures worse and had devastating effects on his mood. Despite the family’s vehement protests, doctors gave him an antipsychotic. A few days later, Oliver suffered a lethal neurological side effect. A week later, he was taken off life support. An inquest into his death found that the drug had led to the rapid deterioration.
After his death in 2016, his mother, Paula, launched a campaign to mandate training on intellectual disability and autism for health care workers. In 2022, the U.K. National Health Service listened. Now, all health care workers in the NHS must complete both an online module and a live interactive session covering communication and accommodations needed for this population. The U.S. needs to follow suit, starting with medical schools.
This is a tiny step in the right direction, but significantly more is needed before medical professionals treat everyone equally (mostly because they are a part of society, and society itself is ableist, sexist, racist and so on, but specifically in these fields, where the power balance is often unnecessarily skewed, and where one party just assumes they “know better”, marginalised people will always be marginalised further).