AI Article Synopsis

  • Scientists are changing how we understand body clocks, which affects how we think about people with circadian disorders (issues with sleep and body rhythms).
  • The article talks about the unfair treatment of these individuals and how the medical field often doesn't recognize their struggles.
  • It suggests ways to improve care for people with circadian disorders and includes them in the disabilities movement to ensure they get the support they need.

Article Abstract

A paradigm shift in circadian science is underway, exposing ethical tensions from a legacy of pervasive neglect of circadian disorders. This article canvasses ethical questions about stigma, justice, and accommodation that should be formally recognized to reconceive circadian care. Responding to these questions first requires confronting medicine's long-standing history of ableism in how circadian disorders are understood. This article also examines historical origins of the clinical and ethical need to expand diagnostic and therapeutic care access for patients with circadian disorders. Finally, this article recommends how to create space within the disabilities movement for persons with circadian disorders.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1001/amajethics.2024.816DOI Listing

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