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Thanks and a hat tip to Patti D.....
“I dream my paintings, then I paint my dreams” – Vincent Van Gogh
Medicaid is at the center of the current national policy debate. Republican proposals to partially repeal the Affordable Care Act (ACA) include substantial changes to Medicaid that could affect more than 70 million US individuals. How Medicaid works, whom it covers, and how it is funded is a complicated but critical topic. This Viewpoint summarizes the main features of the Medicaid program and how proposed legislation might affect it.
Medicaid has become the nation’s largest source of health insurance, covering 77 million people in 2017 (Box). Yet this statement belies the multifaceted nature of the program, which covers numerous populations with different program features. One portion of Medicaid functions largely as a health insurance program for low-income families. Contrary to popular perception, however, not all poor US residents are eligible for the program. Prior to the passage of the ACA, coverage was available only to low-income individuals in these categories of eligibility: children, pregnant women, parents, elderly adults, and people with disabilities.
Much deeper article about the documentary. Also, the link to the description of the medical model is to the MDRC Version of that model!!!.....
“When you talk about disability rights with people, they just look at you like they didn’t think such a thing existed,” says Dr George Taleporos. “People don’t like talking about, hearing or watching disability. It’s not as sexy as gay rights or climate change. It’s just not.”
Taleporos is a disability rights activist, and a wheelchair user. He appeared in the first season of ABC TV’s You Can’t Ask Me That and now in the feature film documentary Defiant Lives. Director Sarah Barton tells a largely untold story, charting the history of the disability rights movement in Australia, the US and the UK. “As someone with a disability, it’s really novel to see a film about your people,” Taleporos says.
“Disability is never represented from a human rights perspective. It’s represented through a lens of pity, or stories about overcoming the odds. The hero who, despite their hideous impairment, was able to get into the Paralympics. It’s all about the hero and pity narrative. Never about the disability rights narrative.”
Drawing on research from experts such as Taleporos, Barton’s documentary asserts that this hero/pity narrative created a negative stigma that still has powerful implications today. It is associated with the medical model of disability, which is often criticised for treating people with disabilities as lacking or abnormal – or as if they are sick and in need of a cure.