{"version":1,"type":"rich","provider_name":"Libsyn","provider_url":"https:\/\/www.libsyn.com","height":90,"width":600,"title":"Episode 125: The Call is Coming From Inside the House","description":"Interviewees: Neera Jain, PhD \u2014 Senior Lecturer, Centre for Medical and Health Sciences Education, Waipapa Taumata Rau, The University of Auckland Hannah Kakara Anderson, PhD, MBA \u2014 Assistant Professor of Pediatrics, Children's Hospital of Philadelphia and the University of Pennsylvania Abigail (Abby) Konoposky, PhD\u2014 Director of Medical Education Research, Department of Psychiatry, Northwell&amp;nbsp; Interviewer: Lisa Meeks, PhD, MA \u2014 Professor of Medical Education, The University of Illinois College of Medicine, Chicago;&amp;nbsp;Host, the Docs With Disabilities Podcast Description: In this episode of Stories Behind the Science, we sit down with Drs. Hannah Kakar Anderson, Abby Konoposky, and Neera Jain to discuss a paper that confronts some of the most painful and persistent realities in medical education: The Call Is Coming from Inside the House. Together, they explore how racism and ableism intersect in the experiences of racially minoritized medical learners with disabilities\u2014and why traditional conversations about diversity and inclusion often fail to capture these realities. Using disability critical race theory (DisCrit), narrative inquiry, and counter-storytelling, the authors illuminate what participants described as a haunted \u201chouse of medicine\u201d\u2014a space marked by exclusion, surveillance, distorted reflections of self, and support systems that too often become sources of harm rather than protection. Through powerful metaphors drawn from horror\u2014No Trespassing, Hall of Mirrors, and The Call Coming from Inside the House\u2014the conversation examines how institutional structures and well-intentioned actors alike can perpetuate systems that marginalize learners. But this episode is not simply about oppression. It is equally a conversation about resistance, agency, and survival. Grounded in Caitlin Seida\u2019s poem Hope Is Not a Bird, Emily, It\u2019s a Sewer Rat, the authors reflect on the fierce and complicated hope carried by learners who persist despite environments that were never designed with them in mind. Their stories are not one-dimensional accounts of struggle\u2014they are acts of testimony, community building, and imagination for a different future. The discussion reviews:  How racism and ableism operate as intertwined forces within medical education. Why horror became a powerful analytic metaphor for understanding participants\u2019 experiences.  What it means to be simultaneously hyper-visible and invisible in training environments. How institutional actors may unintentionally reproduce harmful systems\u2014and what it means to recognize \u201cthe call\u201d within ourselves. Why the authors resisted easy solutions and instead invite educators to sit with discomfort before rushing to reform. How participants\u2019 stories function as \u201capocalyptic logs\u201d and acts of \u201cleaving evidence\u201d for future learners and institutions.  Dr. Anderson brings a clinician-educator\u2019s perspective and deep commitment to educational equity, reflecting on disability as both a personal and professional identity. Abby Konoposky offers a linguist\u2019s and educational psychologist\u2019s lens, unpacking agency, metaphor, and the power of story to challenge dominant narratives. Dr. Jain contributes expertise in ableism, disability studies, and anti-ableist practice, connecting participants\u2019 experiences to broader histories of disability rights and racial justice. Together, they invite listeners not only to understand these stories\u2014but to reckon with what they reveal about medicine itself. This episode asks us to imagine what medicine might become if we listened more closely to the people who have long been navigating its haunted spaces\u2014and if we allowed their stories to reshape the house itself.  Transcript:   https:\/\/docs.google.com\/document\/d\/1dWbGNYB_pzptoEUDSKiS7bOr3DHEOGwqundz90i4fVk\/edit?usp=sharing&amp;nbsp;  Bios: Hannah Kakara Anderson, PhD, MBA, is an Instructor of Pediatrics at the Children\u2019s Hospital of Philadelphia and the University of Pennsylvania. Her work focuses on educational equity in medical education, with particular attention to disability equity and the creation of learning environments that support diverse learners and the communities they serve. Drawing from both lived experience and scholarship, her work explores how medical education can better sustain learners with disabilities and advance justice in training environments. Abigail (Abby) Konoposky, PhD,&amp;nbsp;supports medical education research in the Department of Psychiatry at Northwell Health. Trained in linguistics and educational psychology, her scholarship explores language, agency, and the ways stories shape educational experiences and systems. Her work is informed by both personal experience with disability and a commitment to understanding how narrative and structure interact in medical education. Neera Jain, PhD, MS is Senior Lecturer at the Centre for Medical and Health Sciences Education at Waipapa Taumata Rau, The University of Auckland, New Zealand. Her scholarship focuses on ableism, anti-ableism, and disability in medical education. With professional experience spanning disability rights, disability resource work, vocational rehabilitation, and disability law, Dr. Jain brings both theoretical and lived expertise to questions of equity, access, and justice in health professions education.  Resources: Anderson, H. L. K., Konopasky, A. W., Bullock, J. L., Meeks, L. M., &amp;amp; Jain, N. R. (2025). The Call is Coming from Inside the House: Racism and Ableism in US Medical Education. Teaching and Learning in Medicine, 1\u201319. https:\/\/doi.org\/10.1080\/10401334.2025.2581621 Annamma SA, Connor DJ, Ferri BA. DisCrit: Disability Studies and Critical Race Theory in Education. https:\/\/www.researchgate.net\/publication\/284446065_DisCrit_Disability_Studies_and_Critical_Race_Theory_in_Education Mingus M. Leaving Evidence. https:\/\/leavingevidence.wordpress.com Seida C. Hope Is Not a Bird, Emily, It\u2019s a Sewer Rat.https:\/\/www.tennesonwoolf.com\/hope-is-a-sewer-rat-caitlin-seida\/  Key Words: Disability inclusion \u00b7 Racism \u00b7 Ableism \u00b7 DisCrit \u00b7 Medical education \u00b7 Narrative inquiry \u00b7 Counter-storytelling \u00b7 Equity \u00b7 Learning environment \u00b7 Disability justice ","author_name":"DocsWithDisabilities","author_url":"https:\/\/www.docswithdisabilities.org\/podcast","html":"<iframe title=\"Libsyn Player\" style=\"border: none\" src=\"\/\/html5-player.libsyn.com\/embed\/episode\/id\/41415545\/height\/90\/theme\/custom\/thumbnail\/yes\/direction\/forward\/render-playlist\/no\/custom-color\/88AA3C\/\" height=\"90\" width=\"600\" scrolling=\"no\"  allowfullscreen webkitallowfullscreen mozallowfullscreen oallowfullscreen msallowfullscreen><\/iframe>","thumbnail_url":"https:\/\/assets.libsyn.com\/secure\/content\/202284405"}