Guest guest Posted November 29, 2006 Report Share Posted November 29, 2006 Due to my recent litany of questions, I was asked very nicely if I had thought through any solutions, to the problems posed. Also, requested was suggestions on what to do next, depending on the outcome of the CAA. First I want to give a brief history, best seen at Kolin’s website www.kolinsjourney.org. Kolin was diagnosed with Moderate/Severe(mostly severe) Autism in the summer of 2001. Since that time, we have worked to help him using all means possible. We did biomed, we did ABA, we did SI, we did effective Behavior Treatment Plans in school and we focused on how to bring the best out of him. Kolin lost his medical diagnosis. My partnership with the school has allowed us to continue necessary services, by putting off his reevaluation of eligibility because we know he would be found ineligible. He graduated from speech last year, with the highest scores in non-literal language the speech path had ever seen in any of her students. Kolin is in regular third grade this year, an honor roll student, in advanced placement math and a member of the Cub Scouts. We did this as family, without going bankrupt or losing financial solvency. The ABA we had paid for by TRICARE, before the changes made in 2002 that O’Hanlon wrote about. We were one of the few families to access it then. Now it is impossible. I have been following this since it passed and was funded in 2002. As I said, I became a professional. I worked as a Parent Education Coordinator for one of the two national Parent Training and Information Centers funded under IDEA. I also work for the DOD as an Army Family Program Manager for two, line item funded programs. However when it came time to use the money, it was up to the discretion of the installation Commander as to whether I would see it to run the programs. Also, one of the programs was a specific committee based, issue oriented, program to bring change to the Army community, know as the Army Family Action Plan. As a program manager, facilitator and historian for the program, I became we versed in how group dynamics can be manipulated by professionals brought in as Subject Matter Experts who proclaim the issue does not exist, even when the issue being discussed is obvious. My most recent professional position was as a Support Coordinator (Case manager) for the Arizona Division of Developmental Disabilities, which is one of the most comprehensive and responsive to the DD community. In AZ, ABA is funded through Medicaid, Title 19 and there is no waitlist for access to either Medicaid or waiver programs. The only wait is for providers. My focus was Autism and Early Intervention. My personal focus has been and will be on the benefits of actions for families. My professional, volunteer and personal passion is helping families understand systems and bureaucracies which hinder their ability to ensure the best possible outcome for themselves. It is from that perspective I bring solutions and question the actions of others. It is not that the organizations out there do not have, in their mission and focus, the desire to help families. I know several, whose works in a variety of family focused services are wonderful contributions to the autism community, NAA, UA, Autism One, and Generation Rescue. AS has done tremendous things to bring notoriety to the issue of autism incidence, however there does not seem to be a consensus of what they are working toward. In spending time with families, reading, listening and understanding the ground for myself, the following is what seems to be imperative to most families out there today. Yes, many want to be vindicated and the research could show this. But research should focus on treatments, biomed research is occurring, behavioral is occurring, replication is occurring. But with all the research, parents also need to be taught to how and when to use it effectively. Along with the knowledge on how to work with the bureaucracies and the normal due process of federally funded entities. It is standing our ground about what we know, what we have seen, and how many of those affected that has recovered. It is also by taking it to the states...taking it to the counties...taking it to the schools. It is through helping families learning how to help their children to a successful outcome, of whether it is independent living, employment, college, school or recovery. That is done through education, intervention and treatment. Maybe we should be looking for a treatment bill versus a research bill. A research bill does nothing to Combat Autism for kids 6 years or older, which is the majority of the kids out there. It may hopefully work to prevent more children from being affected; if it is allowed to be published and recognized (The funder can revoke the right of publication, if the contract for funding is written with that clause). A change to the paradigm through a definition change, using the CDC referenced definition as supportive evidence. That could address the federal paradigm as untreatable...which is related to the mental health aspects not the neurological, as defined by the CDC. Inclusion of the mandate of coverage under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act, so that Group benefit plans would have to consider the options such as done with postpartum stays of 48 hours or mammograms and well women checks. Another idea is strengthen the mandate for Mental Health Parity and anti-discrimination under Insurance regulations for Autism/Aspergers. More families would benefit from half the amount allocated for research related activities, $250 million, to treatment through the listed entities of the bill, Dept of Ed, Medicaid & Early intervention. Increase funding to education of providers and bringing the standards to highly qualified based on current research to those who teach the professionals. Encourage following the lead of Medicaid Waiver demonstration projects for effective delivery of services. Lastly, the idea of a tax credit to help families has been floated around, which could be beneficial as well. Fixing the current CAA to reflect a bill that actually works directly to help families would take a real commitment by all the negotiators to those ideas, with little room for compromise, negotiations and denial of allowing those with conflicts, either direct or indirect, from calling the shots. Also, the idea of allowing the IACC of directing the funds is appealing, it still would need to have the approval of the NIH to go forward. Plus the previous point regarding the make-up of the IACC along with the decision of inclusion of such a board, make it difficult ensure accurate representation. The IACC, although, supposedly independent, is a bureaucratic board and thus those selected for the board have a specific ways of selection. Who will have oversight of that selection? I hope this helps in explain alternate ideas for ways of combating autism. Thank you, Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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