Autism Therapy: health care

definition of health care: not yet defined.

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Annals of General Psychiatry, by Bakare, MO, Agomoh AO, Ebigbo PO, Eaton J., Okonkwo KO, Onwukwe JU, and Onyeama GM, published in 2009, summarized Oct 23, 2009

A survey of Nigerian health care workers showed that the workers may have some negative opinions or beliefs about autism and autism therapies.

The researchers surveyed 134 Nigerian nurses about their attitudes and opinions related to autism. The survey found that 55% of the nurses thought that autism was treatable and 32% thought that it was preventable. Nurses working less than 6 years were more likely to think autism was preventable. Also, 25% of the nurses thought that autism was caused by supernatural causes. The authors think that changing the opinions of the healthcare workers through education is important. The authors also think that families of people with autism would be more likely to seek care and therapy if the healthcare workers encouraged it.


Child: Care, Health and Development, by Minnes, P., and Steiner K., published in 2009, summarized Aug 20, 2009

Parents report a need for more information about medical services and therapy options for their children with autism.

The authors brought together parents of children with brain problems. They asked the parents what they thought about a range of topics such as the health care and therapy services for their children. There were 3 groups of parents: a fragile X syndrome group; a Down syndrome group; and an autism group. The autism group had 3 mothers of boys (6-8 years old) with autism. The autism group said that they had to put a lot of energy into finding doctors to diagnose their child. They also had to work hard to figure out how to get therapy services for their children. The parents agreed that parent advocacy (parents seeking help for their children) was very important. The mothers hoped that more children will be screened early so they may be diagnosed early. They also think that parents should get more information from doctors about services and service providers at the time of diagnosis.


Journal of Pediatric Health Care, by West, L., Waldrop J., and Brunssen S., published in 2009, summarized Apr 1, 2009

Some drugs may be useful in treating behaviors associated with autism.

This review article describes the research behind the use of drug therapy to treat autism. Risperidone is the only drug that is now approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to treat autism. There will likely be many new drugs in the future that can help with the treatment of autism. Medications should be chosen with care to target the child's behavior problems. Parents should be informed that drugs can have adverse effects and parents should keep a careful watch for those adverse effects.


Pediatrics, by Mandell, DS, Morales KH, Marcus SC, Stahmer AC, Doshi J., and Polsky DE, published in 2008, summarized May 28, 2008

White children with autism are more likely to get drug therapy than other children.

This study was designed to see how many children with autism receive drug therapy. The authors found that over half of Medicaid-enrolled children with autism received drug therapy. Children who are on Medicaid because of disability are more likely to receive drug therapy than children who are on Medicaid because of poverty. Children who had been hospital inpatients were also more likely to receive drug therapy. The authors suggest that care should be taken to make sure that all children have the health care resources that they need and are getting drug therapy if they need it.


We do our best to keep up with therapeutic interventions for kids with autism, however, as this article discusses, early diagnosis and intervention are still important tools. The American Academy of Pediatrics recommends that doctors administer a standardized test at the 18-month and 24-month well baby checkups. Research done by The Commonwealth Medical College (TCMC) students demonstrated that in Pennsylvania, only 1 in 10 children were diagnosed with autism by the pediatrician in 2009 and 2010. For this reason, TCMC is recommending outreach programs for family doctors and other health care professionals. Mary Christine Remick, at Northeast Regional Center for Autism Spectrum Disorders at Friendship House explains that if doctors screened for autism, up to 70% of cases could be discovered early and therapy could begin.

Read original article: Early Diagnosis Key to Treatment for Autism Spectrum Disorders


Sitrin Health Care Center, Upstate Cerebral Palsy and Kelberman Center are fundraising to build an equine therapy center for kids with autism and other developmental and physical delays. These New York organizations will build the center on the Sitrin campus and will employ occupational therapists, physical therapists, speech therapists, and equine therapists. Studies have found that a horse’s movement mimics that of the human body; this in turn helps build muscle strength in kids who might be weak in those areas. In addition, being in relationship with a horse has been shown to promote calm, relaxation, social integration, and responsibility for people who receive equine therapy.

Read original article: Equestrian Therapeutic Center to be Built on Sitrin Campus


The Child Early Intervention Medical Centre (CEIMC) at the Dubai Health Care City hopes to help parents with early diagnosis of their child’s autism. CEIMC uses biomedical testing as well as applied behavior analysis (ABA) in diagnosing and treating children. They are focused on working with the children and their parents at the center as well as training the parents to work at home with their kids. CEIMC recently added Child Learning and Enrichment Centre to their offerings. The learning and enrichment center uses psychiatrists, psychologists, speech therapists, and occupational therapists to prepare school-aged children to mainstream.

Read original article: A Lesson So Special


Creative Arts Therapies (CAT) use art therapy, music therapy, dance/movement therapy, poetry therapy, drama therapy, and psychodrama to help treat autism and other development and psychological delays. Sharon W. Goodill, PhD, defines CAT as "six fields that combine artistic expression with psychotherapy to promote healing, wellness, and personal change." While the six therapies that make up CATs gained professional status in the 1950s, they are each represented by their own professional associations, with an umbrella organization - the National Coalition of Creative Arts Therapies Associations. Creative art therapists usually focus on one area of the arts to treat healthcare issues, but many use a dual focus in their treatment plans for patients. The six therapies have been found to work well with people who have little or no communication skills, for example, children with autism will often be able to dance or paint or make music as a way of expressing themselves. It is a way to show emotions without verbal communication.

Read original article: The Creative Arts Therapies: Making Health Care Whole



Please comment on this autism topic.

i have 2 children with asd; my youngest (boy) was diagnosed 1st. at 3&1/2 while my daughter was over 8. same diagnosis. looks a little different but dealt with alot of predjudice in health care to acknowedge issues. used aba for my son for 1 year... it did help him in groove to follow rules and improve language... plus he started reading which was awsome. we switched to rdi when he was 5 yrs old. talk about family improvement... slowing it down, decreasing verbal language, increasing non verbal and referencing .. goal is building quality of family unit.  my son is now in grade 2 and motivated to do things by himself... he knows he can ask without a tantrum if he needs help.. our daughter is very self conscious and trying to rein force different minds. when you practice it you see the result of a calm connection.. and it gives you hope . colette mann


Knowing the financial burden attached to being a caregiver for an Autistic child, we were compelled to build a free web version for users who do not have a smartphone. In our journey with our children we realized that we needed healthcare providers, educators and mentors on board when it comes to improving the quality of care a person receives. The website is ready but is in the testing phase. Here is a link to pictures of what it will look like: http://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=188241727857292&set=a.188241557857309.51353.146190262062439. We encourage people to go to http://bit.ly/eoHQUR to be notified when iBiomed Health Organizer & Network is released to the general public. Please add us as a resource on Healing Thresholds. Thanks again.

iBiomed is a mobile application which was recently featured in the Post and Courier newspaper, in Charleston, SC. and the Wall Street Journal.  It was built by Florence Iwegbue & Kwame Iwegbue who is also a Physician in Charleston, SC. They personally built this software in order to ease the back breaking burden on their family, after their son was diagnosed with Autism and started having unexplained seizures: "We developed the software specifically to manage our son's Autism care, but we now realize that it goes way beyond the world of Autism." They hope to spread the word about this software because they know all to well, the pressures & stress that caregivers and families of children with special needs have to endure.

iBiomed is a free native iPhone/iPad application designed to manage the health and well being of children with Special Needs or individuals with complex, chronic medical illnesses. The App is now available for a free download from the App store. They have left it free because we believe this tool would be of great benefit to many people living with complex medical conditions requiring multiple healthcare providers, medications, tests & rehabilitative therapies. "We cannot articulate why we are so driven by this effort but we believe the medical community has long awaited it. We also believe that as a family it is a calling for us because of the special skills we possess and the circumstance we have found ourselves in. Our son has taken us on an unforgettable journey." Below is a link to watch a demo of iBiomed and a link to our site and Facebook group for pictures of the App in action. They realize that not everyone has an Apple device so we will be making it available for free use online by the end of this month. People can register here to be notified upon it's release: http://bit.ly/eoHQUR.

Click Here: http://bit.ly/iin5H9 for info on how iBiomed can help Health care Providers, Therapists, Nutritionists, Chiropractors, Acupuncturists, Educational Institutions, Vendors and other Holistic Practitioners.

The iBiomed Software allows you to create an Interactive Social Network Bio. If you are a vendor, Holistic practitioner, Healthcare provider, Therapist, Blogger, or mentor, this feature allows an easy one-click access to you, your product and your service.

iBiomed's Features Include:

1. Treatment Log Book:

Keep detailed records on the go and soon online with a mobile logbook for Prescriptions, Supplements, Therapies, Diets, Allergies, and Tests.

2. Add Multiple Time Stamped Notes to each of the above treatment items.

Your Notes are easily search-able.

3. Manage the Treatment of as many people as you'd like; Just as with a portable electronic medical record.

3a. Add as many Supplements, Medications, Tests, Diets and Therapies & Alternative/Holistic Treatments as you’d like.

4. Treatment Journal:

Keep a Journal or Daily diary for each person whose treatment you'll be managing with iBiomed. The Journal entries are time stamped and easily search-able. e.g. foods, behavior logs or side effects and reactions.

5. Treatment History:

Review your treatment history of tests, supplements, diets, therapy notes, behaviors and journals. You can also edit past log entries, including test results. If the test results are numerical, you can easily differentiate between normal and abnormal values.

6. Treatment Reminder:

Treatment alerts to help you remember to administer supplements, medications tests and even Therapy sessions and medical appointments.

7. Share Treatment Information:

Share details of your treatment plan with family, health professionals, therapists or nutritionist by email. iBiomed can automatically generate an email summary of your treatment plan and treatment history by date range.

8. Supply Tracker for Rx & Supplements: Lets you know when you should reorder a prescription or Supplement.

9. Health Forum with "Smart Topic Filter" and Push notification to your mobile device: Now all your forum questions & answers can be accessed on your phone. It is also a so a great platform for parents and healthcare providers to interact.

10. Customizable Graph to track just about anything a person wants to watch closely; from symptoms to behaviors, appetite, sleep, or anything you want to track.

11. Available for online use at biomedprofile.com in January 2010. iBiomed Online Health Organizer will have all the same features of the App and much more. Go to: http://biomedprofile.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=54&Itemid=61 to Sign up to receive an email notification when the site is ready for online use.


Ayurveda for Autism Spectrum Disorder

Jan 4, 2011 by sunethriayurved...

Hi everybody,

I am Dr.Prasad M, MD (Ay.), working with autistic kids from 2002 onwards. I went through the article mentioned. Let me share with you an unbiased information on the scope of Ayurveda, the age-old Indian system of Vedic medicine, in the treatment of ASD. This is based 100% on my personal experiences. Kindly see the following passages. Comments and criticisms are welcomed whole-heatedly. 

Scope of Ayurveda in Autism Spectrum Disorder

Trials with Ayurvedic medicines and treatments for their efficacy in ASD are going on at various centres in India and abroad.   The main advantage of ayurvedic medicine is that it has got a magazine of safe therapeutic preparations of various forms which are developed by continuous trials and rectifications over thousands of years.  There are many preparations like kwatha (decoction), churna (powder), arishta (self-fermented beverage), gudika (pill), ghrtha (medicated ghee), thyla (medicated vegetable fats) etc.  In recent times, many of the herbs used in Ayurveda are proven to have excellent detoxifying effect as well as free radical- scavenging potential.  The therapeutic preparations like kwatha are combinations of many herbs.  These combinations are originally developed on the basis of ayurvedic principles.  Till recent times these formulations were not given due consideration by the western scientists.  But now the picture has changed. More and more ayurvedic preparations are under their evaluation.  In Ayurveda, the compounds as well as single herbs are used for different purposes of health care like pacifying vitiated functional units called doshas, eliminating excessive toxic accumulations, providing targeted nutrients to tissues, tuning the mind-body coordination, sharpening the efficacy of sense-organs, and so on.  These prescriptions are based on personalised evaluation of different aspects like body constitution, doshik status, power of digestion and assimilation, status of bowel evacuation, physical strength, mental constitution, and etc which is done by experienced physicians.  Mind is an important factor in the healing of any ailment.  It is assumed that mind is like ghee which is held inside a pot called body.  If the ghee is hot the pot also gets warmed and if the pot is hot definitely the ghee also will be hot.  You cannot expect warm ghee in a cool pot and wise versa.  Similarly, food is given the supreme role in the healing process as well as in the maintenance of health.  It is a basic concept in Ayurveda that there is no use for any medicine if one stick on to pathya (wholesome) food (as it brings about health spontaneously) and there is no use for any medicine if one stick on to apathya (nasty) food (as there is no scope for functioning of the medicine).   In the context of autism, these assumptions are extremely important and seen exceptionally beneficial. 

The care of autism, as per ayurvedic principles, is based on the protocol of a three-step intervention

  1. detoxifying the body by regulating the agni
  2. Cleansing the dhatus (body tissues) by medicines and therapies
  3. Enhancing the mental abilities like comprehension, memory etc. by promoting the Agni.

Again, though the stages are generalised the execution will be personalised. 

The first stage is based on medicines almost completely.  Medicinal preparations like purgatives, specific formulations for de-worming, for enhancing the functions of the liver and pancreas, for enhancing the digestive fire (Agni), and for regulating the intestinal motility are used in this stage.  Certain preparations meant for squeezing out heavy metals from the tissues are also used.  Turmeric, garlic, curry leaves, etc are having this advantage. 

Second phase is mainly comprised of massages.  Traditional methods like abhyanga (hot-oil massages), udwarthana (dry powder massages), pindasweda of various types, thalapothichilpizhichil, etc are used here.  These manoeuvres improve the muscle tone, reduce hyperactivity, create better motor coordination, and normalize most of the obsessive repetitive movements.  Child sleeps well.  The bowels become more regular at this stage.  He/she will be more receptive to commands or suggestions.  The demand for sensory stimulation slows down considerably and the symptoms like increased sensitivity to certain sounds (hyperacusis) slowly disappear.  There will be oral medications parallel to the therapies and a few of these medications will be carried over to the next phase as well.  

Third stage is very specific and sold not be started before the proper completion of the first two.  This is an important point as there is a general tendency to mark the condition as mental retardation and to prescribe brain tonics and memory boosters to all autistic kids indiscriminately.

The major therapies in this stage are shirodhara (pouring of liquids like oils on the head), shirovasthi (holding of medicated oils on the head inside specially designed leather-rims), shiropichu (wetting the scalp with oil bandages), dhoopanam (fumigation with specific medicines) etc along with specific medications like kallyanakam kashayam, indukantham kashayam, gorochanadi gudika,balakanakapathradi kashayam, sidharthakam gudika etc.  Certain specific herbs like sahadevi, sankhapushpi, vacha, vishnukranthietc are also used.  Follow up is done with ghee preparations like mahakallyanaka, mahapaisachika, brahmighrtha, saraswathaghrtha, etc. 

Conclusion

It is seen that the classical ayurvedic treatment done systematically give promising results in kids diagnosed with ASD.  But it should be emphasised that the level of improvements is different from child to child.  Another important point is that these interventions are made in a corrective manner.   The child gets relieved of a lot of physical problems and tantrums.  But this will not make him/her a normal child.  Intensive training and special education are needed to put him on track and to catch up the peers.  This requires the dedicated involvement of parents, special educators, and skilled professional like occupational therapists.


Autism and Deafness Event

Oct 20, 2010 by Deaf Autism

Calling all educators, health care personnel, family members and other allies


interested in individuals (children & adults)


with autism spectrum disorders who also are deaf or hard of hearing


 


Understanding a Dual Diagnosis: Children and Adults with Autism who are also Deaf/Hard of Hearing


< Special Educational Event! >


 


Why:   To learn more about this dual diagnosis and how to better serve people affected


          


To give your ideas on creating a statewide support and information association for professionals and parents  


 


What: Guest presentation by Joseph Trapani, representative from the National Deaf    


           Academy, Mt. Dora, Florida.  NDA has a specialty program aimed at serving


            deaf/hh children & youth with co-occurring autism spectrum disorders.


           


Small group and large group brainstorming and visioning for new association


 


When: Wednesday, November 10, 2010,     


 9:30 – 12:30 presentation and visioning


 1:00 – 2:00 PM - Planning for next steps for interested stakeholders/Logic Model                                                


 


Where: Colorado School for the Deaf and the Blind


33 N. Institute Street
  Colorado Springs CO 80903


 


Cost:  This event is free but donations would be greatly appreciated to pay for refreshments, interpreters, and materials. Some support may be available for families to attend: apply for a scholarship to Janet@handsandvoices.org.


 


To register: Contact Lorri Park, Autism Society of Colorado lorri@autismcolorado.org


                    720-214-0794 x11 by November 4, 2010.


        Please advise if interpreting or other access is needed.


 


Unable to attend in person, but interested in possible webinar attendance?


Unable to attend, but want to give feedback on needs and desires for this population we serve?  


Please contact lorri@autismcolorado.org. Lorri will email information about potential webinar attendance and email a prepared survey to you to return by November 4, 2010. 


 


Event Hosts:    Autism Society of Colorado (Lorri@autismcolorado.org)


                         Colorado Families for Hands & Voices (editor@handsandvoices.org)


                         Rocky Mountain Deaf School


                         Colorado School for the Deaf and the Blind


                         Colorado Department of Education


                         Bill Daniels Center for Children’s Hearing       and more to come…            



Please comment on health care or other autism therapy topics.

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