Picking up from where he left off
Dinesh returned to medical school with a renewed sense of self, courage and fierce determination. Nothing was too big a sacrifice anymore. He would wake up at 4am to get ready for school or hospital and study in the library until the last train left. This was his routine six days a week for two years.
“I wanted it so badly and I gave it my everything,” he says simply. “I had to go to the extreme because only one Australian had gone through medical school with similar challenges before. My friends told me I had to behave like an Olympian - throw myself into it and be extremely disciplined and motivated. So that's what I did.”
He also had to think outside the box for ways to do things without using his fingers, like inserting an intravenous cannula, holding a stethoscope and using the part of his hand that still has sensation to feel someone’s abdomen.
In 2016, Dinesh became the first quadriplegic medical graduate in Queensland and the second in Australia. But there was one more hurdle – getting a job. While his classmates were accepting internships through the state’s central process, Dinesh was made to undergo medical assessments and eventually told he wouldn’t be starting work with everyone else. The news was crushing.
Then word of his availability reached the Gold Coast University Hospital who wasted no time snapping him up. Dinesh is now a senior resident doctor at its emergency department, one of the busiest in the country.
His difficulty in securing employment led him to co-found Doctors with Disabilities Australia, a disability-led organisation that aims to eliminate physical, attitudinal and systemic barriers that people with disabilities experience in medicine. The organisation also provides resources, mentoring and peer support for doctors and medical students.
“Right after I returned to medical school, the Medical Deans of Australia and New Zealand (MDANZ) created a policy document that could exclude medical students with disabilities from pursuing their studies. I remember sighting an email from a committee member which gave me an insight into that mindset. It was disappointing and hurtful.”
Through DWDA, Dinesh has worked with the Australian Medical Association to create first-of-kind national policies for inclusivity in medical education and employment. During the COVID-19 pandemic, he advocated for equitable treatment for people with disabilities, including as a witness to the Disability Royal Commission.
Dinesh has also given input into how other professions and corporations practise inclusivity and his advocacy work has now extended beyond medicine and Australia’s borders.
Last October, Dinesh was named QLD 2021 Australian of the Year, a recognition he says that has spurred him to push further and do more. “These awards matter because recipients are held to a higher standard and given the platform to take important issues forward and create change.”