Guest guest Posted November 19, 2004 Report Share Posted November 19, 2004 NDSC GA Newsline Support the NDSC’s Advocacy Work! Join Now! TO: NDSC Members and Parent Affiliates FROM: Goodman, Director Governmental Affairs DATE: November 19, 2004 I.D.E.A. REAUTHORIZATION BILL TO BECOME LAW On November 17, 2004, the IDEA reauthorization conference committee approved a negotiated version of the House and Senate bill, now called Improving Education Results For Children With Disabilities Act of 2003. It is being voted on today in the House of Representatives. Some of the highlights of the negotiated bill include: · The bill retains the “manifestation determination” provision that states that for non-drug, non-weapon, non-violent behavior schools must consider, in disciplinary actions, if the behavior was related to the disability. However, it eliminates important factors that must be considered in making this determination that places a heavy burden on the student. · The bill removes the current “stay-put” provision that enables a student’s right NOT to have their education disrupted and to “stay-put” pending an appeal if their parent challenges the allegation of misconduct or finding of No manifestation. · The bill makes it more difficult for parents to exercise their due process rights. · The bill retains short-term objectives for students taking alternate assessments. This does not include a large number of students who would be able to take regular assessments with accommodations and modifications. We expect this bill will pass both the House and the Senate. Senator Jim Jeffords (I-VT) was the only conference committee member to vote against the conference report. The vote in the House of Representatives will occur today. The vote in the Senate will take place soon, although the exact scheduling is not currently known. The next step will be for the President to sign the bill into law. The U.S. Department of Education, Office of Special Education and Rehabilitative Services will be the agency responsible for writing the regulations that implement the new law. This is a very important step in the process because it is the “how to” part of the law. This law rolls back the rights of students with disabilities, as feared. However, had it not been for the strong voices of parents, the final bill would have been much worse. Our voices were heard – references were made by Senators and Representatives during the final conference committee meeting about hearing from parents and addressing their concerns. Our advocacy for students to receive an education that prepares them for an independent productive life must be as active as ever. We will keep you posted as the law moves through the regulatory process. Parents will need to continue to make their voices heard in this process so that the regulations will not further deny our children’s rights. We will keep you up to date on the developments. If you have questions or comments, please e-mail g1961@.... We are always glad to receive comments and answer questions. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 3, 2005 Report Share Posted January 3, 2005 wow I have to admit, our pediatrician was wonderful! I was given all kinds of books and pamplets and several parents of children with DS came to visit us in the hospital bringing their children for us to meet. I have to admit, it wasn't until we started into the school system that all heck broke loose. Carol Trishasmom She isn't typical, She's Trisha! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 3, 2005 Report Share Posted January 3, 2005 NDSC GA Newsline NDSC RESEARCH NEWS TO: NDSC Members and Affiliated Parent Groups FROM: Sue Joe Resource Specialist DATE: January 3, 2005 Mothers Have Spoken: Physicians Need to Do a Better Job in Delivering a Postnatal Diagnosis of Down Syndrome Specific Recommendations Offered A study released today by the medical journal, Pediatrics, and reprinted at the NDSC website (www.ndsccenter.org), indicates that mothers of children with Down syndrome are overwhelmingly dissatisfied with the way their doctors communicated a diagnosis of Down syndrome. According to the survey of 2,945 mothers, doctors routinely failed to provide up-to-date printed or oral information about Down syndrome, potential positive outcomes for their child, or contact information for other parents with children with Down syndrome. By almost every standard, the mothers surveyed felt like their doctor had failed to make the birth of their child with Down syndrome a positive experience. The study was authored by Skotko, known to many as the leader of past NDSC Brother/Sister Conferences. Skotko is a joint-degree student at Harvard Medical School and Harvard’s F. Kennedy School of Government. His faculty advisor, Dr. Crocker, is a member of the NDSC’s Professional Advisory Council and has served on the NDSC Board of Directors and the NDSC Foundation Board of Trustees. This research study asked mothers to reflect on a central question: How could medical support have been better when you received the diagnosis of Down syndrome for your child? To answer this, mothers completed an 11-page survey, which included a variety of topics: How did your physician deliver the diagnosis? Were the verbal explanation adequate, the setting appropriate, the language sensitive, and the printed materials helpful? What was it like to receive the diagnosis? The majority of mothers reported being frightened or anxious after learning of the diagnosis, and very few rated the overall experience as a positive one. Among the words that were used were shocked, angry, devastated, overwhelmed, depressed, stunned, and helpless. The statistics revealed that mothers were more apt to be fearful and anxious if their physicians emphasized the negative aspects of Down syndrome when first delivering the diagnosis. Mothers were frequently advised to put up their child for adoption, or chided for not having prenatal testing, the survey found. Some mothers received the news too soon, such as while having episiotomies stitched up. Although the worst instances came from the 1980s and earlier and physicians improved over time, mothers still reported insensitive comments as recently as the late 1990s and early 2000s. A mother in 1997, for example, heard a doctor refer to her newborn as an “FLK” (“funny-looking kid”); another who gave birth in 2000 reported, “The doctor flat out told my husband that this could have been prevented or discontinued at an earlier stage of the pregnancy.” “Doctors have gotten better over time, but it’s been a very slow change, and they’ve really gone from terrible to just bad,” says Skotko, who has a 24-year-old sister with Down syndrome and who, along with NDSC Board Member Kidder, co-authored the award-winning book, Common Threads: Celebrating Life with Down Syndrome (Band of Angels Press). “Finding out a diagnosis of Down syndrome does not have to be a horrible process. In fact, the mothers in this study explain how physicians can make it a positive experience. We hope this paper will be a catalyst for increased dialogue among doctors.” National Down Syndrome Congress President Judy Martz agrees. “Hopefully, doctors will carefully consider the recommendations in ’s study. Parents can help affect positive change in their communities by providing copies of this research to local physicians and hospitals. A study published in a leading medical journal will carry a lot of weight with most doctors.” Martz also noted that the study gives parents the chance to educate their pediatricians and other doctors on where to find accurate, up-to-date information. The NDSC National Center provides free information and the resources of its renowned Professional Advisory Committee through its toll-free hotline (800/232-6372) or via e-mail at info@.... By analyzing the survey responses, Skotko developed a list of ten recommendations for physicians when delivering a postnatal diagnosis of Down syndrome: (1) The person to deliver the news should be a physician. Mothers in this study received the diagnosis from a variety of health care providers: pediatricians, neonatologists, obstetricians, genetic counselors, nurses, and in two cases, the lactation specialist and the candy-striper volunteer. Mothers felt that a physician was the person most knowledgeable to present the diagnosis. (2) Obstetricians need to coordinate their messages with neonatologists and pediatricians. In many hospitals, mothers suggested that there was confusion and, at times, disagreement over which physician was responsible for delivering the news. Physicians from various specialties need to work collaboratively. (3) The news should be delivered once the mother is settled and as soon as a physician suspects the diagnosis. Some mothers were upset that they received the news immediately, particularly while episiotomies were still being sutured. Most mothers, however, were worried during what was described as a silence period, where no health care professional would give them an honest answer about what was going on. A physician should not wait until a diagnosis is confirmed through karyotyping; mothers prefer to be aware of the physicians’ thought process, no matter how difficult the news might be. (4) Whenever possible, the physician should make the announcement with both parents present, in a private setting. As the diagnosis of Down syndrome is just as novel to the father as it is to the mothers, physicians should not expect that fathers should be the ones to share the news with the mothers. (5) When delivering the news about Down syndrome, the physician should first congratulate the parents on the birth of their child. Mothers have recommended that physicians include the positive aspects of Down syndrome in their first descriptions of the condition. Many mothers mentioned that the best words used by their physician during this initial explanation were, “Love your child like any other child.” (6) Health care professionals should keep their personal opinions to themselves. Mothers have asked physicians to offer sound medical advice based on up-to-date information, but not personal opinion. (7) Mothers should be provided with up-to-date printed materials. Most new parents were frustrated at either receiving outdated information or no information at all. Mothers requested receiving complimentary copies of books on Down syndrome that included positive imagery; or, in the cases where hospitals were financially unable to do so, a bibliography listing the most current resources for new parents. (8) Parents should be provided access to other families who have children with Down syndrome. First call programs—that is, support programs in which a parent of a child with Down syndrome visits or phones one of the new mothers—were mentioned as invaluable sources of help to the new parents. Hospitals and parent support groups should work collaboratively to provide this requested outreach to new parents. (9) After the initial diagnosis or suspicion is shared with parents, they should be offered a private hospital room. As mothers respond to the diagnosis with a variety of emotions, many requested that they have a private space to express those emotions. (10) Physicians should be cognizant of the realities and possibilities of growing up with Down syndrome. Simply put, Down syndrome is not just what was taught in medical school. Mothers considered it the responsibility of doctors to stay informed about the educational and social potentials of children with Down syndrome. NDSC Executive Director Tolleson notes, “Having this study published in a major journal is a remarkable achievement for a medical student. We are proud of our affiliation with and are grateful for his commitment to persons with Down syndrome and their families.” An analysis of responses from mothers who received the diagnosis of Down syndrome through prenatal testing will appear in an upcoming issue of the medical publication, American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology. Skotko has promised to alert parents when this new study is released. A summary of the Skotko report, as well as the full text, and a link to the American Academy of Pediatrics, may be found at the NDSC website at www.ndsccenter.org. Financial support for this research was provided by the Tim White Fund from Children’s Hospital Boston and a part-time research grant from Harvard Medical School. Some of the information for this release was provided by Skotko, who may be contacted at _Skotko@.... Additional information was provided by the Children’s Hospital of Boston (contact -Ellen Shay at 617/355-6420) and Harvard Medical School (contact Lacey at 617/432-0442). ****************************************************************************** Help Spread the News! NDSC Research News is an excellent resource and one we encourage you to share with your parent group affiliate, or personal, listserv. Support Our Efforts to Promote Sound Research! ****************************************************************************** How to Join the NDSC Founded in 1972, the NDSC is the oldest national organization for persons with Down syndrome, their parents, siblings and the professionals who work with them. The Congress is known for its advocacy, its encouragement of self-advocate empowerment and leadership, as well as its many services, including Down Syndrome News, the Governmental Affairs Newsline, Research News, hosting the nation’s largest DS convention (scheduled for July 29-31, 2005 in Anaheim, CA) and its toll-free information and resource hotline. Annual dues are just $25, and may be paid online at www.ndsccenter.org; over the phone at 800/232-6372; or by mail at 1370 Center Drive, Suite 102; Atlanta, GA 30338. Please join us as we continue “Making a difference, one family at a time”! ****************************************************************************** If you have questions or comments, please e-mail sue@.... We are always glad to receive comments and answer questions. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 13, 2005 Report Share Posted January 13, 2005 NDSC GA Newsline Support the NDSC’s Advocacy Work! Join Now! GOVERNMENTAL AFFAIRS NEWSLINE TO: NDSC Members and Affiliated Parent Groups FROM: Goodman, Director Governmental Affairs DATE: January 12, 2005 Medicaid Efforts Continue NDSC and other national organizations have joined Families USA in a letter to President Bush urging the President not to cut Medicaid or make changes that would alter the fundamental structure of the program. Reportedly, the Administration’s budget proposal for fiscal year 2006 may attempt to limit federal funding to states for the Medicaid program forcing cuts in eligibility and all non-institutional services. Using the budget resolution process is an indirect way to change the Medicaid program. Tolleson, NDSC Executive Director, has also sent a letter to President Bush. In this letter, he states: “Medicaid is critical in covering long term care and supports for adults with Down syndrome. For many of these individuals, their ability to live in the community, to have access to transportation, to have support in a job where they make a real contribution, are all funded through Medicaid. Block-granting or capping funding will likely lead to a reduction in essential services for those currently receiving Medicaid and denial to individuals who might be applying for services in the future. Cuts or caps to Medicaid will have a devastating effect on our most vulnerable citizens.” If you would like to read the letter from NDSC to President Bush, go to www.ndsccenter.org. The December issue of the Newsline includes a more comprehensive discussion of possible legislative scenarios through which Medicaid could be changed. ************************************************************************ Below is a thoughtful piece written by Bob , Director of Advancing Independence, who is a former Deputy Assistant Secretary for Disability in the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Washington, DC. This article not only talks about saving the Medicaid program but also discusses its current bias toward institutional services. Saving Medicaid Needs To Be About More Than Settling For The Status Quo By Bob Progressives and Americans of good will from across the spectrum should heed Bill Vaughan's clarion call to resist Bush's attempt to destroy the Medicaid program. Not only is it the largest publicly financed health coverage program in the U.S., Medicaid also can offer the most comprehensive prenatal, well child, acute care and long term services benefits package benefits package of any public or private plan in our nation. As such, it's an exemplar of the kind of coverage that as progressives we should be working to make available all our people, including the poor, the rich and everyone in between. Medicaid is not without its flaws, however. One of these is what is called its " institutional bias. " Simply put, Medicaid spends far more money institutionalizing children, adults and older persons with disabilities than it does to provide the needed services and supports to enable them to live in their own homes and communities. Some progress has been made in remedying such gross inequities. But, nationally about 70% of Medicaid long term care funds are spent on nursing homes and other institutions. This is despite the fact the vast majority of people with severe disabilities on Medicaid, including many older people with Alzheimer's disease, live in the community. A recent study found that of the roughly 3 million people with disabilities living in the community who need assistance with eating, bathing and dressing each day as many as one million do not get all the help they need. 80 percent said they could not get dress everyday. 30 percent soiled themselves because they had no other choice. And, more than one in 10 said they had gone to bed hungry at least once in the last month for lack of help ( LaPlante, M.P., Kang, T., Kaye, H.S., & Harrington, C. (2002). Unmet need for personal assistance services among adults living at home. San Francisco, CA: Disability Statistics Center. http://www.pascenter.org/publications/publication_home.php?id=23). Those in nursing facilities fare little better and often far worse than this. In fact, one federal investigation found that over 90% of the nursing homes provide their residents with less than 3 hours of assistance with essential tasks like eating, bathing, dressing, going to the bathroom, etc., each day (U.S. the Department of Health and Human Services, Report to Congress: Appropriateness of Minimum Nurse Staffing Ratios In Nursing Homes. 2000 http://www.cms.hhs.gov/medicaid/reports/rp700hmp.asp?). Talk about throwing good money after bad. As someone with a severe disability who has always gotten the assistance I need to live in the community all my life and the son of a mother with dementia that died in a nursing home not because she " needed to be there " but because there was simply no other alternative, I am here to say that we must do better. This is why it's so disheartening to hear Vaughan and others cite the financing of nursing home care as the prime reason why we must preserve Medicaid " as we know it. " There is much about the program that is vital and should be preserved and strengthen. But, there is likewise much about it that simple justice demands be changed. Ridding the program of its institutional bias once and for all tops this list. Senators Tom Harkin and the late Wellstone have led the good fight to do this by introducing legislation known as the Medicaid Community Attendant Services and Supports Act (MiCASSA) in every Congress in the last decade. Yet, most in the progressive community have given the bill tepid support at best. Preferring instead to endorse the status quo and thus, the needless institutionalization, segregation and marginalization of millions Americans with disabilities of every age, race and region of our country. We can and must strive to do better. If you have personal experience (positive or negative) obtaining services with Medicaid funding, please send them to g1961@.... As we continue this important task to protect Medicaid, these stories are invaluable to use with legislators. Help Spread the News! The NDSC’s Governmental Affairs Newsline is an excellent resource and one we encourage you to share with your parent group affiliate, or personal, listserv. Support Our Advocacy Work! ****************************************************************************** How to Join the NDSC Founded in 1972, the NDSC is the oldest national organization for persons with Down syndrome, their parents, siblings and the professionals who work with them. The Congress is known for its advocacy, its encouragement of self-advocate empowerment and leadership, as well as its many services, including Down Syndrome News, the Governmental Affairs Newsline, hosting the nation’s largest DS convention (scheduled for July 29-31, 2005 in Anaheim, CA) and its toll-free information and resource hotline. Annual dues are just $25, and may be paid online at www.ndsccenter.org; over the phone at 800/232-6372; or by mail at 1370 Center Drive, Suite 102; Atlanta, GA 30338. Please join us as we continue “Making a difference, one family at a time”! ****************************************************************************** Holiday Note: NDSC’s National Center will be closed Monday, January 17, in observance of the Luther King, Jr. Holiday. The Center will reopen at 9 AM EST Tuesday. ****************************************************************************** If you have questions or comments, please e-mail g1961@.... We are always glad to receive comments and answer questions. ****************************************************************************** Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 7, 2005 Report Share Posted July 7, 2005 --- IB MailSpace Ad http://instantbuzz.com/947c440d_1t ---- Big Money Pro - The Premier Online Opportunity. http://instantbuzz.com/947c440d ------------- MailSpace TM and Patent Pending -------------- NDSC GA Newsline GOVERNMENTAL AFFAIRS NEWSLINE TO: NDSC Members and Affiliated Parent Groups FROM: Goodman, Director Governmental Affairs DATE: July 6, 2005 Supreme Court To Decide Important I.D.E.A. Case Schaeffer v. Weast is a case brought in Montgomery County, land, under the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) by the parents of a child with severe learning disabilities. The parents of Schaeffer were forced to pay for private school placement for their son because the Individualized Education Program (IEP) offered by the school district was “insufficient to meet his needs,” according to the Petitioner’s (parents) brief. The issue that will be decided by the Supreme Court is: If parents disagree with an IEP developed by the school, do the parents have to prove that the IEP is not appropriate? Or, does the school that developed the IEP have to prove that the IEP is appropriate? The case began with the decision of an administrative law judge in 1998 who stated that the burden of proof is on the parents and ruled in favor of the school district. After the District Court heard the case, they decided that the burden of proof is on the school district. Therefore, the school district must prove the IEP is appropriate rather than the parents having to prove that it is inappropriate. After several hearings by an Administrative Law Judge, the District Court and the Court of Appeals, the Court of Appeals reversed the district court on the burden of proof issue, imposed the burden on the parents and remanded the case. According to the brief filed by the Petitioner, Schaeffer’s parents: Although graduated from high school in 2003, this case nonetheless presents a continuing controversy because petitioners seek reimbursement for the costs they incurred in providing their son the appropriate education services that the school district refused to provide. These costs total thousands of dollars for eighth grade alone. You may read about this case in the June 30, 2004 issue of the Special Education Advocate at http://www.wrightslaw.com. Administration Supports School District Against Parents in Schaeffer According to a Tuesday, June 28, 2005 Washington Post article, the Bush administration has filed a brief in support of the school district. In a brief filed Friday (June 24), U.S. Solicitor General D. Clement urged the high court to uphold the latest Court of Appeals ruling when it hears the case in its next term. " Public officials, including public school officials, are presumed to act in good faith compliance with their legal obligations, " Clement said in the brief. " Thus, where, as here, a party alleges that those officials violated their legal duties, the complaining party generally bears the burden of proof. " This is a reversal from the Clinton Administration that, in 2000, filed a brief in the same case when it was heard by the Court of Appeals on appeal from the first ruling in favor of the parents. The Solicitor General, who filed the Administration’s brief, stated in the brief, that the previous Administration held a different view. The case will be heard after the Court convenes for its fall session in October, 2005. ************************************************************************ Help Spread the News! The NDSC’s Governmental Affairs Newsline is an excellent resource and one we encourage you to share with your parent group affiliate, or personal, listserv. Support Our Advocacy Work! ************************************************************************ How to Join the NDSC Founded in 1972, the NDSC is the oldest national organization for persons with Down syndrome, their parents, siblings and the professionals who work with them. The Congress is known for its advocacy, its encouragement of self-advocate empowerment and leadership, as well as its many services, including Down Syndrome News, the Governmental Affairs Newsline, hosting the nation’s largest DS convention (scheduled for July 29-31, 2005 in Anaheim, CA) and its toll-free information and resource hotline. Annual dues are just $25, and may be paid online at www.ndsccenter.org; over the phone at 800/232-6372; or by mail at 1370 Center Drive, Suite 102; Atlanta, GA 30338. Please join us as we continue “Making a difference, one family at a time”! ************************************************ If you have questions or comments about this Newsline, please contact g1961@.... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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