# How adults with cerebral palsy successfully confront and cope with ableism: a peer-led research project

**Authors:** Cadeyrn J. Gaskin, Andrew D. Brown, Sue Harris, Alex Birnie, Carmen Vargas, Finn O’Keefe, Angela Dew, Debbie Dorfan, Freya E. Munzel, Claudia Strugnell, Maddie Fogarty, Adam Goodridge, Joy Martin Mitchell, Shelley Spencer

PMC · DOI: 10.1080/17482631.2026.2616117 · International Journal of Qualitative Studies on Health and Well-being · 2026-01-15

## TL;DR

This study explores how adults with cerebral palsy confront and cope with ableism through a peer-led research project.

## Contribution

The study provides insights into successful strategies used by adults with cerebral palsy to confront and cope with ableism.

## Key findings

- Common forms of ableism included denial of privacy and perceived helplessness.
- Successful actions included educating perpetrators and self-advocacy.
- Outcomes included changed perpetrator behavior and increased feelings of success.

## Abstract

This study focused on how adults with cerebral palsy successfully confronted ableism during encounters with others and successfully coped with ableism in general.

Adults with cerebral palsy led this critical participatory action research project, in which ten adults with cerebral palsy shared their experiences (via an online survey or interview) of successfully confronting ableism (situations, actions taken, and outcomes) and coping with ableism.

Participants had difficulty recalling successful confrontations due to failing to recognise ableism, ignoring it, or being unsure whether confrontations were successful. Of the 23 situations described, common forms of ableism were denial of privacy, perceived helplessness, and spread effect. Actions taken in successful confrontations were educating perpetrators, being independent, self-advocating or requesting advocacy, attempting to make perpetrators feel uncomfortable, and disengaging with perpetrators (and encouraging others to do similar). Outcomes were changed perpetrator behaviour, apparent changed perpetrator perceptions, actions to prevent recurrence of ableism, disengagement, changed thinking, and feeling successful. Adults coped with ableism through changing their own thinking about disability and ableism, engaging in everyday activities, seeking social support, and making efforts to change society.

Harnessing this knowledge may assist people with cerebral palsy to challenge the social oppression they face.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** cerebral palsy (MONDO:0006497)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** cerebral palsy (MESH:D002547)

## Full text

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## References

63 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12818316/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12818316