There's a discussion in itself. I am neurodivergent and do not ideantify as disabled despite being disabled by the design decisions of others.
One of my kids (now in his 20s) has Cerebral Palsy and does identify as a "disabled person."
If you use the social model of disability then people are disabled by the design of their environment not matching the needs of their impairment. They are disabled people, but disabled by others not disbled as a statement of who they are.
Some other people prefer "people with disabilities", which is cool, but I know lots of people who do not like that because they have impairments related to conditions which only becaome disabilities when they are not considered by designers. They do not have a disability, but they do experience designed barriers.
It's a tricky one and has experiential, political and social lenses, and lots of different points of view.