The lived experience of female academics with long-term conditions impacting on energy levels and/or cognitive function,2023 Brewer

Discussion in 'Other health news and research' started by Sly Saint, Dec 3, 2023.

  1. Sly Saint

    Sly Saint Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    Abstract
    The present study contributes to an expanding literature investigating the systemic and structural issues that serve to disadvantage disabled academics. Individual interviews were conducted with ten female academics, each with a long-term condition impacting on energy levels and/or cognitive function. Interviews, informed by the researcher’s lived experience as a female academic with an energy limiting condition, were subjected to Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis. Six themes were identified. These were (i) Identity and the concept of disability, (ii) Dependence and vulnerability, (iii) Legitimacy, convention, and conformity, (iv) workload, intensification, and marketisation, (v) Insecurity, competition, and comparison, and (vi) Perception, othering, and isolation. Findings demonstrate that those with different diagnoses report similar lived experiences, especially in relation to such fundamental issues as identity, disclosure, and isolation. A range of recommendations are provided to improve education practice and policy.

    Points of interest
    • The present study explored the lived experience of female academics, each with a long-term health condition impacting on energy levels and/or cognitive function.

    • Individual interviews were conducted and subjected to Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis.

    • Six themes were identified. These were (i) Identity and the concept of disability, (ii) Dependence and vulnerability, (iii) Legitimacy, convention, and conformity, (iv) Workload, intensification, and marketisation, (v) Insecurity, competition, and comparison, and (vi) Perception, othering, and isolation.

    • The focus on symptom profiles rather than diagnostic labels highlights shared barriers to progression, counters difficulties with the current diagnostic system, and enables the development of practical recommendations to enhance practice and policy.



      https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/09687599.2023.2287412
     
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  2. Hutan

    Hutan Moderator Staff Member

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  3. Midnattsol

    Midnattsol Moderator Staff Member

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    One is constantly told one is not "disabled enough". I had good grades as a student, that meant I should not need accomodations. I struggled to have the university understand there were things I simply couldn't do all the time despite being able to do them once in a while, and what eventually helped was to have a crash in front of a supervisor that had to help me walk... suddenly I was believed and things just sorted themselves out despite me using the exact same words to explain my needs as when the university would not bother.
     
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