Guest guest Posted November 3, 2010 Report Share Posted November 3, 2010 For Families With Children Who Have Special Needs, a Little Break Nagle for The New York Times Catalina , 17, gives some free time to Choi, 39, by baby-sitting for her sons, Logan, 6, left, who has an attention disorder, and Spencer, 3, who has a developmental disorder. By SUSAN DOMINUS< <http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/d/susan_dominus/ index.html?inline=nyt-per> http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/d/susan_dominus/i ndex.html?inline=nyt-per> On Thursdays, Ms. Choi can feel reliably confident that her husband will not come home to find her tense and exhausted. By bedtime, both of her children will have eaten dinner and been bathed. The 3-year-old, Spencer, who has a speech delay and a developmental disorder, will not have walked around the living room in self-soothing circles the moment she turned her attention elsewhere. Her 6-year-old, Logan, who has attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, will have finished his homework. Thursday is the best day because that is the day Catalina — cheerful, well trained and all of 17 years old — comes to watch Spencer and Logan, each for an hour, separately, and peace descends on the family’s two-bedroom apartment in western Queens. Competent, reliable baby sitters are closely guarded treasures for most parents; for families who have children with special needs (but who do not qualify for state-supported respite care), such baby sitters may exist only in the realm of fantasy. Those who need a break the most, then, are often the least able to find someone they trust to provide it. Several such parents expressed that sentiment several years back to Joy Levitt, the executive director of the Jewish Community Center< <http://www.jccmanhattan.org/> http://www.jccmanhattan.org/>in Manhattan. And so, since 2004, the center has been offering, occasionally, a six-week training class< <http://www.jccmanhattan.org/category.aspx?catid=2579> http://www.jccmanhattan.org/category.aspx?catid=2579>for young people interested in caring for children with autism or other developmental disorders. Catalina is one of 34 graduates of the class. At the outset, Ms. Choi did not give too much detail, beyond the boys’ diagnoses, to Catalina, whom she met a year ago in the elevator of the seven-story building where they both live. “You don’t want to scare them away,” said Ms. Choi, 39, who is home with her children full time. Once she started, Catalina was, at times, bewildered — like when Spencer started jumping, over and over, on the toy kitchen set up in his parents’ bedroom. “I didn’t know what to do,” said Catalina, who earns $8 an hour. “I felt closed off.” After one harrowing afternoon at an ice-skating rink, when Spencer kept running away from Catalina as his mother tried to oversee Logan’s birthday party, Ms. Choi fully expected Catalina to quit; other sitters before her had not worked out. “I saw on her face that she was exhausted,” Ms. Choi said. “She looked overwhelmed and confused.” A few days later, Ms. Choi hugged Catalina and told her it was all right, she understood if she wanted to stop coming. “I told her, ‘Don’t worry, I’m not going to quit — I’m just going to try harder,’ ” Catalina recalled. Sometimes, without training, all the trying in the world will not be enough, which is why both jumped at the opportunity for Catalina to take the Jewish Community Center class last spring (Ms. Choi paid the $36 fee). Catalina roped in two friends, and on their hourlong commute back to Queens, after the two-hour class, they all talked about what they had learned. Catalina finally understood why, when Spencer behaved wildly, his mother hugged her son to calm him down, rather than disciplining him. She learned to use the simplest possible language, or pictures, to plan out the day’s events. She began to address Spencer and Logan at eye level, on her knees. She grew confident redirecting the boys’ energy when they felt out of control. “Now I actually like Catalina to be in the park with Spencer even more than my own husband, I’m sorry to say, or me,” Ms. Choi said. “Both of us are so tired. Catalina has so much energy. And she understands what to do.” The challenges of raising children in New York are myriad. But the opportunity in the universe that is a New York apartment building surely offsets those hazards: from a chance encounter with a young woman in an elevator, Ms. Choi found a lifeline for her children, and a young high school student found a calling. Having seen Spencer progress, Catalina now intends to pursue a career in speech pathology. With Catalina, Ms. Choi said, Spencer takes more risks, like going on a swing, which he had long feared. Gently pushing that tentative, hopeful child for the first time, Catalina said, was one of the proudest moments of her life. “I felt like I actually took a fear away from this kid,” she said. “And maybe he’ll think, if I can go on a swing, I could become the president. They don’t have to see what they have as an obstacle. I thought, O.K., I really did a good job, here.” Ms. Choi no longer worries that Catalina will quit. E-mail: <mailto:susan.dominus%40nytimes.com> susan.dominus@... <bergenjewishspecialneeds/message/1369;_ylc=X3 oDMTJycmpoY3NjBF9TAzk3MzU5NzE1BGdycElkAzE0NDIxNzMzBGdycHNwSWQDMTcwNTA4MjE1NA Rtc2dJZAMxMzY5BHNlYwNkbXNnBHNsawN2bXNnBHN0aW1lAzEyODg3OTczMTQ-> NYT: At the Age of Peekaboo, in Therapy to Fight Autism Posted by: " susan berger " <mailto:alsus131@...?Subject=%20Re%3ANYT%3A%20At%20the%20Age%20of%20Pe ekaboo%2C%20in%20Therapy%20to%20Fight%20Autism> alsus131@... <danceema> danceema Tue Nov 2, 2010 2:17 pm (PDT) At the Age of Peekaboo, in Therapy to Fight Autism DaSilva for The New York Times By APRIL DEMBOSKY Published: November 1, 2010 Carmen and Saul Aguilar worked with Sally to help their son Emilio. She has donated all manner of biological samples and agreed to keep journals of everything she�s eaten, inhaled or rubbed on her skin. Researchers attended the birth of her second son, Emilio, looking on as she pushed, leaving with Tupperware containers full of tissue samples, the placenta and the baby�s first stool. Now the family is in yet another study, part of an effort by a network of scientists across North America to look for signs of autism as early as 6 months. (Now, the condition cannot be diagnosed reliably before age 2.) And here at the MIND Institute at the University of California Medical Center, researchers are watching babies like Emilio in a pioneering effort to determine whether they can benefit from specific treatments. So when Emilio did show signs of autism risk at his 6-month evaluation � not making eye contact, not smiling at people, not babbling, showing unusual interest in objects � his parents eagerly accepted an offer to enroll him in a treatment program called Infant Start. The treatment is based on a daily therapy, the Early Start Denver Model, that is based on games and pretend play. It has been shown in randomized trials< <http://pediatrics.aappublications.org/cgi/content/abstract/peds.2009-0958v1 > http://pediatrics.aappublications.org/cgi/content/abstract/peds.2009-0958v1> to significantly improve I.Q., language and social skills in toddlers with autism, and researchers say it has even greater potential if it can be started earlier. �What you ultimately might be doing is preventing a certain proportion of autism from ever emerging,� said Mandell, the associate director of the Center for Autism Research at the Children�s Hospital of Philadelphia. �I�m not saying you�re curing these kids, but you may be changing their developmental trajectory enough by intervening early enough that they never go on to meet criteria for the disorder. And you can�t do that if you keep waiting for the full disorder to emerge.� Sally , a MIND Institute researcher who has been working with the Aguilars, said she faced several challenges in adapting the toddler therapy for infants. Even normally developing babies cannot speak or gesture, let alone pretend. Instead, Ms. has parents focus on babbling and simple social interactions that occur in the normal routine of feeding, dressing, bathing and changing the baby. �Patty-cake and peekaboo or tickle games, those are people games,� she explained to Carmen and Saul Aguilar during their first session with their son Emilio at 7 months old. Ms. talked about the next 12 weeks and how they would focus on getting Emilio to exchange smiles, to respond to his name, to babble with them, starting with single syllables (�ma�) and moving on to doubles (�gaga�) and more complex combinations (�maga�). �Most babies come into the world with a built-in magnet for people,� Ms. said. �One thing we know about autism is that it weakens that magnet. It�s not that they�re not interested, they have a little less draw to people. So how do we increase our magnetic appeal for his attention?� Lesson 1 was eye contact. Ms. had the parents take turns playing with Emilio, encouraging them to get face to face with the baby and stay in his line of vision. Mrs. Aguilar leaned down on the blue blanket and rattled a toy. �Emilio? Where�s Emilio?� On the other side of a two-way mirror, another researcher watched the session and an assistant monitored three video cameras in the room. Sally Ozonoff, a researcher who first identified Emilio as a candidate for the study, stopped by to observe. �He�s just staring at that object even though her face is three inches away,� she said. �He has that flat, very sober-looking face.� Mr. Aguilar tried next. He put Emilio in a red beanbag chair and folded the sides together over the baby. �Squish, squish, squish!� he said. No response. He picked Emilio up over his head and flew him like an airplane. Emilio stared at the ceiling. Mr. Aguilar put the baby back in the beanbag and picked up a stuffed wolf toy. He put it on his head and let it drop into his hands. �Pschooo! Uh-oh!� Finally, Emilio was watching. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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