July 26, 2021

Disability Discrimination Is Hurting the Medical Profession

A new investigation on the Huffington Post has spotlighted a troubling trend in medicine. Many doctors with disabilities experience persistent discrimination at the hands of other physicians and medical professionals. In a profession that regularly requires workers, especially early career workers, to put in grueling shifts of 80+ hours a week, doctors with disabilities are perceived as unable to live up to the grind.

Ableism and disability discrimination have long been part of medical culture, where, according to interviewees, doctors are lauded performing Herculean tasks of self-deprivation and where asking for accommodations is seen as a weakness.

This issue of discrimination is systemic, demonstrated by the fact that only 3% of doctors have disabilities, compared to roughly 25% of the US population. Such a discrepancy indicates that people with disabilities may be deterred before they even pursue a career in medicine or are squeezed out after they are diagnosed.

The pandemic, however, has brought disability accommodation into the public discourse, and many physician, medical student and other medical profession advocacy groups have jumped on the opportunity to press their case for making the medical profession more inclusive and accepting of disability the same way offices in other industries have had to focus on accommodations for their workers.

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New Study Finds Sexual Harassment Pervasive in the Legal Professions

July 15, 2020
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Taking a break from the wall-to-wall imperative that is coronavirus, we wanted to highlight a new study about workplace cultures in the legal practice. Conducted by the Women Lawyers on Guard, the study Still Broken: Sexual Harassment and Misconduct in the Legal Profession shows that sexual harassment plagues women at all levels of the legal profession, from early-career lawyers to judges, and everyone in between.

Berke-Weiss Law Writes About Free Speech in the Workplace for Law360

July 15, 2020
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Berke-Weiss Law answers some questions on many New Yorkers’ minds right now in Law360: can I be fired for protesting or posting about politics on social media? Am I entitled to take time off to protest? Can my employer force me to take a Covid-19 test after protesting but before returning to my workplace?

School Reopening Leaves Parents, Teachers, Administrators, and Politicians Conflicted

July 10, 2020
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As we edge into the dog days of summer, we’re also creeping toward fall classes, and the only thing people are sure of is they’re not sure about sending their kids back to school. And in the backdrop of massive virus spikes in the South and West, come renewed calls to make a decision on whether schools should open in the fall.

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