1 / 17

Defining Disability in an Age of Enhancement

Defining Disability in an Age of Enhancement. James J. Hughes Ph.D. Public Policy Studies Trinity College james.hughes@trincoll.edu Union College – May 22, 2010. What is Ability/Disability? .

callista
Télécharger la présentation

Defining Disability in an Age of Enhancement

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Defining Disability in an Age of Enhancement James J. Hughes Ph.D. Public Policy Studies Trinity College james.hughes@trincoll.edu Union College – May 22, 2010

  2. What is Ability/Disability? • Medical Model of Disability: there is an objective standard of disease/disability, health/ability (and enhancement) • Social Model of Disability: disability is created by how society treats varying levels of health and ability

  3. Human Enhancement • Therapy/Enhancement • Enablement • Some therapies already enhance • Baseline is shifting • Social construction of normal, healthy, able

  4. Therapeutic HETs • Under therapeutic model the sick and disabled will be first to receive HETs

  5. Physical Ability • Prosthetics & Oscar Pistorius • Doping & gene doping • Tissue engineering & stem cells • Declining senior disability and changing expectations of the elderly

  6. Skeleto-Muscular Therapies • Growth factor and follistatin genes inserted into muscle tissue increased muscle mass without exercise, and more with exercise. • A possible therapy for muscle wasting conditions such as Duchenne muscular dystrophy.

  7. Health & Longevity • Therapies that slow aging will be therapies for aging-related diseases. • Obesity • Diabetes • Hypertension • Heart disease • Depression • Immune weakness • Cancer 74 yr-old Tsumu Tosuka

  8. Cochlear & Auditory Implants • Bluetoothed implants will permit implants to work with phones and MP3 players

  9. Artificial Eyes • Today dots of light • Tomorrow infrared and ultraviolet

  10. Artificial Limbs • Artificial limbs could already be stronger than organic ones bebionic fully articulating myo-electric prosthetic hand from RSLSteeper

  11. Cognitive Ability • Therapies for developmental delay, brain damage and dementia • ADHD and stimulants • Flynn Effect

  12. Mental Health & Mood • Diagnosis creep or increasing pathology • SSRIs • Increasing openness but declining tolerance of untreated mental illness

  13. Humans 1.0 Are All Disabled • In the future we will all be “disabled” in relation to the enhanced standard • Question will be how widespread access is to HETs

  14. Victory of the Social Model? • HETs will gradually erode a medical model of disability • Ability will be defined by our access to technological enablement • Convergence of medicalization and social model • Unenhanced subject to: • Prejudice & stigma • Structural barriers

  15. Literacy • Not required a hundred years ago • Expected today • Employment barriers • Stigma • Medicalization

  16. Infertility • Are the infertile disabled or sick? • Infertility always a problem • Now that there are fertility treatments they have organized for access

  17. Capabilities Approach • Sen-Nussbaum • No naturalistic fallacy or status quo bias • More capabilities are better • Capabilities determined by social and tech enablement

More Related