Applying the health justice framework to address health and health care inequities experienced by people with disabilities during and after covid-19

2020 
The COVID-19 pandemic has been especially devastating for people with disabilities, as well as other members of marginalized communities Indeed, an emerging body of scholarship has revealed striking disparities experienced by people with disabilities In particular, scholars have shined a light on issues relating to triage policies that allow for the rationing of critical health care and resources, such as ventilators, for people with disabilities if resources become limited and hospitals cannot treat all patients during the pandemic These injustices are a deserving issue that urgently warrants extensive consideration by policymakers, legal professionals, and scholars At the same time, however, it is crucial to elucidate the ways in which the inequities people with disabilities are experiencing during COVID-19 are the result of deeply rooted injustices that have endured over time To do so, a comprehensive analysis of the inequalities experienced by people with disabilities before and during the pandemic is needed, focused on understanding how law and policy affect these disparities This Article, therefore, builds on, incorporates, and extends the existing scholarship about COVID-19 and disabled people by positioning it within the health justice framework and proposing normative legal and policy solutions to address deeply entrenched inequities that will affect people with during the COVID-19 pandemic and beyond
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