A lot of people ask me about Autism, and I can usually rattle off definitions pretty well, but I found an introduction article which sums a lot of it up (causes, symptoms etc.). It doesn't mention RDI, the therapy we are doing, and it's a rather clinical summary, but it's good if you want a quick 'Autism For Dummies' introduction :)
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Monday, July 20, 2009
Tuesday, February 17, 2009
Some important facts
There's a lot of info flying around about, "This therapy doesn't work, don't do it"...."This treatment is 'evidence-based'", etc.
ABA (Applied Behavioural Analysis) was the first major treatment for Autism and it's been around for around 35 years. It is currently the 'gold standard' Autism therapy. BUT.....
In recent separate studies conducted by the National Autistic Society, Dr Patricial Howlin, and Dr's Seltzer and Krauss, studies of between 68 and 450 people with autism showed that only an average of around 9% of those people held a steady job, 4% were living independently, and 17% held friendships with peers.
Is this all we should expect from the 'gold standard' treatment for Autism?
ABA (Applied Behavioural Analysis) was the first major treatment for Autism and it's been around for around 35 years. It is currently the 'gold standard' Autism therapy. BUT.....
In recent separate studies conducted by the National Autistic Society, Dr Patricial Howlin, and Dr's Seltzer and Krauss, studies of between 68 and 450 people with autism showed that only an average of around 9% of those people held a steady job, 4% were living independently, and 17% held friendships with peers.
Is this all we should expect from the 'gold standard' treatment for Autism?
Tuesday, January 27, 2009
Hooray for the government!
Never thought I'd say that!Today we officially got the go-ahead for our therapy payments. So we have $6000 to spend before June, and then another $6000 to spend for the next financial year.
With the RDI and OT we have planned for the boy, we shouldn't have any problem burning through that 6 grand before June. We're trying to power through those initial 10 parental education modules so we can get onto doing some actual stuff with him, but man, these modules are like going to school and doing homework! And who wants to do that after a busy day at work! But it's gotta be done....especially now since we need to burn up this $6000 in 5 months. Yes, whatever you don't use before June doesn't roll over.
Thanks Kev.....I knew you'd get something right sooner or later.
Thursday, January 8, 2009
I'm a hopeless blogger

I really don't see how some people can write their blogs every day. They must have too much time on their hands, or no life. But then I see blogs of parents with autistic kids who write these huge passages of text every day. Who knows how they fit the time in. I'm not Bloggy McBlogstein. I can't write in a blog every day. I guess I prefer to let a bit build up, then blog it.
Anyway...see that picture up there? That's Northbridge, in a suburb of Sydney called, funnily enough, Northbridge. I've rarely driven across it in my life cause I've never really had to visit that area before. But now I do quite a bit. To a lot of people, it's just a nice old bridge to drive across. But to me now, it's the grand entrance to Autismland. Cause that's where our RDI therapist's office is.
We've started our parental RDI training. Before we even start interacting with the boy, us as his parents have to do an intensive online course to develop our basic understanding of RDI and what is expected of us. It involves watching & reading masses of information about RDI, and then answering questionnaires after each parental module about what we'd just read or watched. The therapist assesses our answers and we progress to the next module. I think there's about 10 parental modules to complete, each about an hour each - not including the time to fill out the questions afterwards.
That's right, we've gone back to school!
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