Thursday 10 September 2009

"adverse medical conditions"

Outside the supermarket earlier there was a guy collecting money for a charity providing days out for kids. I forget the name which I'm annoyed about because I had intended to e-mail them about their ableist language on the board they had up.

The conditions of the children they help include, in this order:
Cancer, Leukaemia, Cerebral Palsy, The deaf and blind, terminal illnesses and other adverse medical conditions.

This is their wording, not mine.

So first I was a bit like "cancer, leukaemia, CP??!"

I don't know why but it just struck me as a strange list. Two serious life threatening illnesses, a touch of CP, two other disabilities then oh look better fit something more serious in to finish off, terminal. Could be taken as the disabilities being as bad as the rest. Not that any of the conditions are "bad" per se just in terms of seriousness.

And their wording really, really sucks. The Deaf and blind? Uh, no thanks.

I really wish that if charities and organisations want to improve lives for PWD or illnesses or other challenges they considered their language and they way the portray people in that. Because days out are nice, and Make a Wish trips can provide wonderful memories and a break from the medical. Wheelchairs and equipment are very useful as well as often life changing.

But phrasing things in a different way also has the potential to shape the world and change lives. Refer to these kids or adults or whatever as "Emma has CP" rather than "CP sufferer Emma" or "People who are deaf and blind" rather than "the deaf and blind."

I totally get that the charities play on pity to raise their money. And maybe they feel that using more inclusive language would prevent them making the difference they do now due to a drop in donations. But changing their language and the spin they put on things has the potential to change the world in another way.

It would help end negative stereotypes, stop reinforcing them in the public's consciousness and it would also do a lot of people in these situations a hell of a lot of good to stop hearing how terrible people consider their lives to be and how they feel sorry for them etc etc. It would never happen but it would be such a great boost of self esteem.

Oh and finally, adverse medical conditions? I never considered CP to be "adverse" before. Hard at times, yeah. But so is life. And CP to me isn't generally a big deal. I didn't really like seeing CP on that list, made me feel strange. Sort of :-S

Obviously I do realise that comes down to the whole never having known any different thing however.

1 comment:

Cheryl said...

Or as my professor would say, before working here I worked with "CONDUCT DISORDERED" teens. WTF? I called her out on it as I have made a point to educating EVERYONE in my dept (students & staff, never singleing anyone out in particular) and she was rather shocked at the oversight as she recognized (after 2 years of my crusade) that she does know better now...

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