Disability, Bias and the Barriers We Build with Daniel Hodges
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In this episode of The Science Intersection, I speak with Daniel Hodges, founder of Pieces of Me, an organisation working to eliminate stigma around disability, physical difference and chronic illness.
Daniel shares his own experiences of being born with multiple disabilities, including blindness and chronic pain, and how those experiences shaped his work in disability advocacy, healthcare access and organisational inclusion. We discuss the difference between performative inclusion and meaningful systems change, why disabled people often face worse outcomes because of social and structural barriers rather than disability itself, and why accessibility should not be framed as “lowering standards.”
Daniel also talks about the shocking assumptions he faced as a blind parent, including having to fight for the right to parent his own child, and how that experience deepened his commitment to helping organisations, healthcare providers and communities do better.
Find out more about Daniel’s work at:
https://www.peacesofme.org/ [https://www.peacesofme.org/]
This episode explores disability, healthcare, employment, parenting, accessibility, bias, and the human-made barriers that can and should be changed. Daniel argues that inclusion begins with curiosity, trust and a willingness to redesign systems so people can compete and participate fairly.
A huge thank you to Daniel Hodges for joining me on this episode and for sharing his experiences, insight and advocacy work so generously.
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