“…Finally, it is well-documented that academic and institutional ableism has contributed to significant under-representation of disabled researchers throughout academia, science, and health research. 15 , 29 , 31 Since disabled researchers receive only a small fraction of grant funding and have a lower success rate for funding conditional on applying, 28 it is plausible that research on structural ableism in public health and healthcare could be dominated by non-disabled researchers. For this reason, it is critical that researchers studying structural ableism acknowledge their positionality, partner with disabled scholars and community members in ways that meaningfully distribute resources and power, read and cite disability studies and disability justice scholarship, and work to disseminate research in ways that are accessible to disabled and deaf communities.…”