
Do Medical Students With Disabilities Face Discrimination?
Disability-based discrimination was reported by 12.4% of medical students with disabilities in the US, with the highest rates being reported by those with chronic illnesses and multiple disabilities. Clinical clerkship faculty and residents were frequently cited as sources of discrimination.
METHODOLOGY:
Researchers analyzed data from the 2024 Association of American Medical Colleges (AAMC) Graduation Questionnaire, completed by 80% of graduates, to understand the prevalence and sources of disability-based discrimination among 1800 students with disabilities.
Disability status was self-reported and categorized as nondisabled, learning disabilities, psychological issues, motor or sensory disabilities, chronic illness, multiple types, and other.
The questionnaire assessed the sources and frequency of discrimination on the basis of experiences such as being denied opportunities for training, receiving poorer evaluations, and facing offensive remarks related to disabilities.
Multiple experiences of discrimination were coded as two or more types, such as denied opportunities and offensive remarks.
TAKEAWAY:
Overall, 12.4% of students with disabilities reported experiencing discrimination, with those having chronic illnesses, motor or sensory disabilities, and multiple disabilities reporting the highest rates of discrimination (P < .001 for all).
Clinical clerkship faculty and residents were the most frequently cited sources of discrimination, affecting evaluations (74.8% and 36.5%, respectively) and opportunities (58.9% and 28.9%, respectively).
The most commonly cited sources of offensive remarks were clinical clerkship faculty (51.6%), residents (30.6%), and students (19.8%).
IN PRACTICE:
'To address these issues, programs should foster an inclusive clinical educational culture, where students are empowered to report discrimination without fear of retaliation, train faculty and residents on disability awareness and inclusive teaching strategies, and learning happens in universally designed settings,' the authors of the study wrote.
'Ensuring that faculty understand the concept and goals of reasonable accommodations is important; resources offered by the AAMC can assist in these efforts. Involving medical students and faculty with disabilities and chronic disease in these efforts is essential and underscores the value of disability representation in medicine,' experts wrote in an invited commentary.
SOURCE:
The study was led by Mytien Nguyen, MS, of the Department of Immunobiology at the Yale University School of Medicine in New Haven, Connecticut. It was published online on July 28, 2025, in JAMA Internal Medicine.
LIMITATIONS:
The self-reported and cross-sectional data may have led to an underestimation of how often discrimination occurred and uncertainty about the exact causes of discriminatory experiences.
DISCLOSURES:
This work was supported by grants from the Ford Foundation; the National Institute on Disability, Independent Living, and Rehabilitation Research; the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation; the National Institute of General Medical Sciences; and the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases. One author reported receiving personal fees from Docs With Disabilities, and two authors reported receiving grants from the National Institutes of Health during the conduct of the study.
This article was created using several editorial tools, including AI, as part of the process. Human editors reviewed this content before publication.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CBS News
an hour ago
- CBS News
Pfizer CEO attending $25 million fundraiser at Trump's golf club after president demands drug price cuts, sources say
Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla is among those expected at a fundraiser President Trump is attending Friday at his golf club in Bedminster, New Jersey, sources told CBS News. The fundraiser for the pro-Trump super political action committee MAGA Inc. aims to raise about $25 million, one of the sources said. One day prior to the event, Mr. Trump sent letters to pharmaceutical companies, including Pfizer, demanding they lower U.S. drug prices to more evenly match what other countries pay. The White House's letters to 17 drug companies, including AstraZeneca, Bristol Myers Squibb, Eli Lilly, Johnson & Johnson and Sanofi, asked for commitments within 60 days to sell drugs for Medicaid patients and all new drugs at "most favored nation" rates. The president posted images of the letters to Truth Social. Mr. Trump signed an executive order in May telling federal officials to draw up "most favored nation" regulations unless pharmaceutical companies made progress toward cutting prices. This week's letters — which were addressed to Bourla and the other CEOs — accused the drugmakers of promising "more of the same" since then. The president said Friday he's "gone to war with the drug companies and, frankly, other countries" on the drug price issue. "I think we're going to be very successful fairly soon. We'll have drug prices coming down by 500, 600 800 even 1,200 percent," Mr. Trump said in an interview with Newsmax on Friday afternoon. The high cost of prescription drugs has vexed both parties for decades. Proposals to tie drug prices for U.S. patients to the typically much-lower rates charged in other developed countries have floated around for years, but the idea has faced some legal pushback. Meanwhile, drugmakers argue price caps could discourage innovation by making it harder to pay for research and development for new drugs. The industry also argues that Americans tend to have access to more groundbreaking drugs than residents of foreign countries with stricter price regulations — and says high drug prices are just one part of a broader trend of higher healthcare spending in the U.S. Bourla has engaged with Mr. Trump in the past. Pfizer was one of the drugmakers that was picked to rapidly develop COVID-19 vaccines in the first Trump administration's "Operation Warp Speed." And two weeks before Mr. Trump's second inauguration, Bourla and other Pfizer executives traveled to Mar-A-Lago for meetings, the Financial Times has previously reported. CBS News has reached out to Pfizer and the White House for comment.
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
What Is Lyme Disease? The Symptoms of Justin Timberlake's Diagnosis
Originally appeared on E! Online Justin Timberlake is holding a mirror up to a misunderstood illness. On July 31, the 'Can't Stop the Feeling' singer shared that he has been diagnosed with Lyme disease, admitting that his world tour was made difficult by his ongoing health issues. 'I don't say [this] so you feel bad for me but to shed some light on what I've been up against behind the scenes,' the 44-year-old shared in a vulnerable Instagram post. 'If you've experienced this disease or know someone who has—then you're aware: living with this can be relentlessly debilitating, both mentally and physically.' And while the *NSYNC alum—who shares kids Silas, 10, and Phineas, 4, with wife Jessica Biel—said he was initially 'shocked' by the diagnosis, it ended up making a lot of sense. 'At least I could understand why I would be onstage,' Timberlake explained, 'and in a massive amount of nerve pain or, just feeling crazy fatigue or sickness.' Though the symptoms vary, according to the Center of Disease Control, the debilitating disease—caused by a tickborne infection—affects over 400,000 people, including celebs like Justin Bieber, Bella Hadid and Avril Lavigne. Keep reading for everything to know about the condition… More from E! Online Bachelor Nation's Madison Prewett and Husband Grant Troutt Share Plans to Spank Their Daughter Tom Selleck, 80, Looks Unrecognizable During Rare Outing Without Signature Mustache How Sixteen Candles' Jami Gertz Became the Richest Woman in Hollywood What is Lyme disease? Lyme disease starts as an infection from a blacklegged tick bite, but can progress if left untreated into a more serious chronic illness, per the CDC. What are Lyme disease symptoms? Initially, Lyme causes a rash, fever, chills and headaches. However, if left untreated, the disease can sometimes evolve into chronic Lyme disease, which can cause fatigue, body aches, or difficulty thinking. Other later stage symptoms include facial droopiness, joint pain, nerve pain, dizziness or shortness of breath. While the symptoms vary, many celebrities have shared that they are debilitating. "I wasn't me anymore,' Tommy Hilfiger's daughter Ally described of her side effects in her 2016 memoir Bite Me. 'I was a weakly projected image of myself on a wall, crying out for someone to help me and figure out what was wrong.' For Shania Twain, the diagnosis impacted her ability to sing. 'My voice was never the same again,' Twain said in Shania Twain: Not Just A Girl in 2022, noting she got Lyme disease while horseback riding in 2003. 'There were seven years where I could not, for example, yell out for my dog. My voice would just cut out in certain places.' How is Lyme disease diagnosed? Lyme disease is difficult to diagnose once it has hit its chronic state. Indeed, Shania admitted that even doctors couldn't determine the source of her vocal problems at first. 'It took another several years to determine what it was,' she described. 'It wasn't anything obvious. Nobody connected the Lyme disease to it. In the end, a neurologist finally connected that it was the nerve to each vocal cord.' However, doctors are able to determine if a patient has Lyme disease through blood tests several weeks after an infection has started by searching for Lyme antibodies. How do you treat Lyme disease? Initial Lyme disease infections can be treated by antibiotics. After Lyme disease becomes chronic, flare ups can arise from stress or pushing your body too hard, according to Global Lyme Alliance, which recommends monitoring symptoms daily to adjust behavior based on how you feel to keep symptoms at bay. What celebrities have been diagnosed with Lyme disease? In addition to Justin Timberlake, stars that have opened up on Lyme disease include Anwar Hadid, Yolanda Hadid, Riley Keough, Amy Schumer, Avril Lavigne, Alexis Ohanian, Ryan Sutter and Ben Stiller. Back in 2020, Justin Bieber detailed his own health while slamming criticism about his appearance.'I've recently been diagnosed with Lyme disease,' Bieber wrote at the time. 'Not only that but a case of chronic mono which affected my skin, brain function, energy and overall health.' Meanwhile, Bella Hadid admitted that she had '15 years of invisible suffering' amid her battle with chronic Lyme disease. 'Living in this state, worsening with time and work while trying to make myself, my family and the people who support me, proud, had taken a toll on me in ways I can't really explain,' the model wrote in a 2023 Instagram post. 'The universe works in the most painful and beautiful ways but I need to say that if you are struggling—it will get better.' Alec Baldwin, for his part, described it as one of the scariest periods of his life. 'I really thought this is it, I'm not going to live,' he shared at LymeAid, the Bay Area Lyme Foundation's gala, in 2017. 'I was lying in bed saying, 'I'm going to die of Lyme disease' in my bed and 'I hope someone finds me and I'm not here for too long.'' Kelly Osbourne was also diagnosed with the disease after being bitten by a tick that came from a reindeer. For more than a decade, Kelly suffered from 'traveling pain,' she wrote in her 2017 memoir, a sore throat and stomachaches. Lyme disease is just one illness celebrities have opened up about, keep reading for more stars who have shared insight into private health struggles.. Lupita Nyong'o's Uterine FibroidsSuki Waterhouse's HerniaBrian Austin Green's Perforated AppendixAdam Devine's Long-Term Injury From Childhood AccidentJason Tartick's Back InjuryMatt Kirschenheiter's Heart AttackTracy Morgan's Medical EmergencyChristy Carlson Romano's Eye InjuryAmy Schumer's Cushing SyndromeCasey Fitzgerald's Neck Injury From Hockey Skate BladeHailey Bieber's Blood ClotJustin Bieber's Ramsay Hunt SyndromeJamie Foxx's Brain Bleed & StrokeEmilia Clarke's Brain AneurysmCori Broadus's StrokeShailene Woodley's Health Battle For the latest breaking news updates, click here to download the E! News App Solve the daily Crossword
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
Scientists Built a Cell That Can Keep Time Like a 24-Hour Clock
"Hearst Magazines and Yahoo may earn commission or revenue on some items through these links." Here's what you'll learn when you read this story: Our biological clock, or circadian rhythm, is immensely important to our health, and scientists are now unpacking the process's secrets at the cellular level. Researchers successfully created synthetic, cell-like structures, or vesicles, to test how varying concentrations of so-called 'clock proteins' affect the vesicles' natural timekeeping. The team—amongst other discoveries—found that clock accuracy was proportional to both the amount of clock proteins and vesicle size. One of the many biological wonders of life on Earth is the near-perfect ways our bodies can sense the passage of time. Known as our biological clock or circadian rhythm, this natural process regulates our wake-sleep cycle and is highly attuned to Earth's 24-hour rotation. To better understand this mechanism, scientists from University of California Merced attempted to reconstruct this clockwork system in cyanobacteria. The team created cell-like structures known as vesicles (each only 2 to 10 micrometers in diameter) and loaded them with 'clock proteins'—groups of proteins that play an important role in regulating the circadian rhythm. The results were published this week in the journal Nature this study, the authors used cyanobacterial clock proteins KaiA, KaiB, and KaiC. As describes, KaiC acted as the system's hub while the other proteins shifted the process forward and backward. The team then inserted the vesicle lipid with a fluorescent tag whose steady glow showed the circadian rhythm in action, and found that both vesicle size and the amount of 'clock proteins' were proportional to how well the vesicles could keep time. 'This study shows that we can dissect and understand the core principles of biological timekeeping using simplified, synthetic systems,' Anand Bala Subramaniam from UC Merced, one of the lead authors on the study, said in a press statement. When the proteins were reduced, however, the vesicles were no longer accurate timekeepers. The authors were able to reliably reproduce this gradual loss of timekeeping, and by building computational models of the vesicle population, the scientists also discerned that the circadian rhythm's additional role of turning genes on and off—in order to control physiological and behavioral processes—did not interfere with this timekeeping ability on the individual level, but proved essential for synching clocks across the population. 'This new study introduces a method to observe reconstituted clock reactions within size-adjustable vesicles that mimic cellular dimensions,' Mingxu Fang, a microbiologist from Ohio State University who wasn't involved with the study, said in a press statement. 'This powerful tool enables direct testing of how and why organisms with different cell sizes may adopt distinct timing strategies, thereby deepening our understanding of biological timekeeping mechanisms across life forms.' Understanding the ins and outs of circadian rhythm is immensely important, as the biological process—or the disruption of it—can lead to a variety of illnesses, including cardiovascular disorders and cancer. It can also impact the treatments for these diseases, and scientists have even explored a concept known as 'chronochemotherapy' to increase the efficacy of the drugs while limiting toxicity by carefully timing doses. The 24-hour clocks within our cells are the smallest on Earth, but they also might be the most important. You Might Also Like The Do's and Don'ts of Using Painter's Tape The Best Portable BBQ Grills for Cooking Anywhere Can a Smart Watch Prolong Your Life? Solve the daily Crossword