I practically agree with the dissent.
US court has erred, me thinks.

taking sighted assistance is no solution for many tasks, including x ray 
interpretation.
In the current technological framework, many such occupations remain outside 
the domain of blind..


-----Original Message-----
From: AccessIndia [mailto:accessindia-boun...@accessindia.org.in] On Behalf Of 
Siddhi Desai
Sent: Friday, July 11, 2014 12:35 AM
To: accessindia
Subject: [AI] A good read

Blind Students and Health Professions

June 30, 2014

By Scott Jaschik

The Iowa Supreme Court on Friday ruled 5 to 2 that a chiropractic
college violated the rights of a blind student by denying him the use
of a sighted reader
to describe X-rays to him. The student, blind from birth, was unable
to stay in the program when his request was rejected, and the Iowa
court's decision
may represent a shift in how courts consider the issue of health
professions students with certain disabilities.

The ideas in the decision, if embraced elsewhere, could lead to more
options in health professions programs for students who are deaf or
blind. The Iowa
court found that a health professions college cannot simply assert
that seeing an X-ray or patient is the only way a chiropractor or
student could make
a diagnosis. And the court ruled that it is relevant that there are
blind medical doctors and medical students, suggesting that there are
ways that blind
students can meet academic requirements that in most cases may require vision.

The Iowa court also rejected the approach of the Ohio Supreme Court in
1996 ruling upholding the right of Case Western Reserve University to
reject a blind
applicant to its medical school.

And the Iowa court offered a new emphasis on a 1979 decision by the
U.S. Supreme Court that upheld the right of Southeastern Community
College, in North
Carolina, to reject a deaf applicant to a nursing program. The Iowa
court said some parts of the nursing case in fact suggest a higher bar
than has been
assumed for colleges to meet in denying accommodations to students
with disabilities.

L. Scott Lissner, Americans With Disabilities Act coordinator at Ohio
State University and president of the Association on Higher Education
And Disability,
said via email that while the ruling will apply only in Iowa, the
issues in the case extend broadly to health professions programs.

"I think health professions are conservative when it comes to risk,"
Lissner said. "Because of their clinical focus they have a tendency to
treat all requirements
and standards as a patient safety issue whether it is or not and are
slow to accept different ways of accomplishing tasks (the essence of
accommodation)
until others have proven it."

While the Iowa ruling will likely be hailed by advocates for students
with disabilities, the dissent in the case shows that many people (and
judges) remain
sympathetic to idea that health professions colleges should have the
right to say that vision is a basic requirement. The dissent states
that the opinion
in the case "elevates political correctness over common sense."

The dissent asks: "What is next? Are we going to require the Federal
Aviation Administration to hire blind air traffic controllers, relying
on assistants
to tell them what is appearing on the screen?"

The ruling is about Aaron Cannon, who enrolled at Palmer College of
Chiropractic, although he was warned that there might be some portions
of his education
that he could not complete due to his blindness. The decision says
that Cannon believed he could work something out, and that he
succeeded in much of the
coursework required by the college.

The conflict came when he was required to take radiology and Palmer
rejected his request that a sighted reader be used to describe X-rays
so he could demonstrate
his ability to diagnose based on X-rays. The college said that its
academic judgment was that its students needed vision to view X-rays
themselves. Palmer
is not unique in having the view that vision is a basic requirement
for a medical professional; the technical admissions requirements of
medical schools
at such institutions as the University of Pennsylvania and the
University of California at Los Angeles (among many others)
specifically state that candidates
for admission must have good vision.

The Iowa opinion, however, found that Palmer was engaged in
discrimination (as defined by the federal Rehabilitation Act and the
Americans with Disabilities
Act) in not considering whether Cannon could function without being
able to see the X-rays himself. The court faulted Palmer for not
considering alternatives
to its traditional requirements and asked how the college, having
apparently granted waivers to some blind students in the past, could
now insist that
it could not do so.

And the court cited Palmer's acknowledgment that about 20 percent of
practicing chiropractors don't have X-ray technology in their offices,
but rely on
others to make X-rays. This suggests, the opinion said, that what
matters to a chiropractor is getting information from an X-ray in some
way, not being
fully involved in the process itself.

The U.S. Supreme Court's 1979 decision, the Iowa court said, certainly
established the idea that a college could demonstrate that certain
requested changes
from students with disabilities would be unreasonable to approve. But
the Iowa court noted parts of the U.S. Supreme Court ruling that may
give more hope
to students like Cannon. The U.S. Supreme Court said that changes in
technology and practice could well make it possible for students with
disabilities
in subsequent cases to be able to meet academic requirements that
couldn't have been achieved in 1979. The U.S. Supreme Court said that
it could "envision
situations" in the future “where an insistence on continuing past
requirements and practices” could deny an education to “genuinely
qualified” people.
It is this part of the decision, the Iowa Supreme Court ruled, that
was relevant to Cannon's case.

The press office for Palmer did not respond to a request for comment.

The Iowa dissent argued, however, that the court should have followed
the model of its counterpart in Ohio when it considered a blind
applicant to the
Case Western medical school. That court specifically cited reading
X-rays as one of the tasks a blind person could not do, and affirmed
the right of the
Case Western faculty to define that as a requirement.

A "misinterpreted X-ray could lead to improper treatment and lifelong
paralysis," the dissent said. "X-ray interpretation requires training
and skilled
judgment to reach correct conclusions based on shades and shadows of
complex bony structures. That is why many physicians with 20–20 vision
choose to outsource
interpretation of X-rays to radiologists. It is ludicrous to override
Palmer’s academic decision and require it to permit a blind person to
interpret X-rays
for patient treatment based on what someone else claims he or she is seeing."

The dissent added that the opinion intrudes on academic
decision-making. Said the dissent: "The majority’s intrusion into
academic judgment on professional
health care standards is unprecedented. No other court in the country
has forced an academic institution to allow a blind student to
interpret X-rays relying
on an untrained sighted assistant."

Lissner of Ohio State said he didn't know if the ideas in the Iowa
ruling would take hold. But he said that, given all the disability
issues raised by
the case, it would be "a wonderful teaching tool."



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