February 10, 2025

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Doctors with disabilities say things need to change in Australia to support more people to study medicine

Doctors with disabilities say things need to change in Australia to support more people to study medicine

Ever since Hannah* was a teen, she had dreamt of a career in medicine.

Now a GP in a rural hospital, Hannah’s dream has come true — but says her journey to get there has been traumatic.

Hannah has battled several diseases for much of her life.

Although they have not stopped her from accomplishing all she has set out to achieve, she said the perceptions of others towards her and her disabilities had at times presented both unexpected and significant challenges.

Ableism at university

Coming from a single-parent family in a rural area, Hannah knew she faced bigger hurdles than many of her peers.

But she was surprised to discover one of the biggest barriers was the ableism she encountered while studying for a postgraduate degree in Australia.

A dark photo showing the arms and lower body of an unidentified woman standing in her lounge room.

Hannah says she faced significant discrimination because of her disability.(ABC News: Emile Pavlich)

Hannah said the medical school she attended attempted to make her repeat years even though she wasn’t failing.

She was also made to repeat assessments.

“I had to do all of the assessments several times with several different people, including the dean of the clinical school, supervising for no reason,” she said.

“Every single time I had passed, and I had already shown competency, purely because I had a disability.

“More than once it was indicated that I should just consider a career in research and not clinical.”

Hannah said it certainly stood out to her that she was different from her peers, but she assumed this was because a lot of the other students had been to private schools and had families with money and connections.

“It wasn’t really until I was in medicine, that it really occurred to me that it was because of my health and my physical abilities,” she said.

Post-graduation hurdles

When Hannah graduated she had to fight to be granted an internship in her local hospital.

She said the regional hospital was happy to have her join their team, but she encountered bureaucratic red tape that instead placed her at a city-based hospital.

“You were guaranteed an intern job [after graduation] … but you could be put, theoretically, almost anywhere,” Hannah said.

It took 12 months and a discrimination lawyer for Hannah to achieve her goal.

An unidentified person stands in front of a window with just their lower legs in shot.

Hannah says she did not immediately recognise that it was her health and physical abilities which were the focus of the discrimination she faced at university.(ABC News: Emile Pavlich)

She has been working in rural Australia for three years, but it has not been without issues.

She said while there had been significant progression for workers needing maternity or parental leave, there was nothing for people with complex health conditions or disability.

Hannah is no stranger to undergoing major surgery, and although many of the procedures she has had would put her in good stead in the long run, she said she had no option but to take unpaid leave at a massive financial cost to her.

Discrimination not uncommon

Associate Professor Lise Mogensen from Western Sydney University’s School of Medicine said Hannah’s experience was not uncommon.

“Research suggests that medical students are reluctant to disclose their disability due to stigma, assumptions about lack of ability and competence and the potential negative implications for career opportunities and progression,” she said.

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