Commentary: Kansas Autism Legislation Is All for Show

By Jeffrey Nessel

Kansas lawmakers have been patting themselves on the back recently for passing legislation that may someday help families with children on the spectrum pay for ABA therapy.  But by insisting on a one-year “test track” the government of Kansas failed to do what 15 other states are already doing — giving equal treatment to families touched by autism.  (For those who aren’t familiar, the one-year test track is a supposed financial feasibility test that applies only to individuals insured by the state employee health plan. State statute says a “test track” must be done before a mandate will be considered for the entire population, although lawmakers are hard-pressed to provide examples of other treatment policies carried out accordingly.)
» READ MORE


Challenges for Kansas Autism Bill

By Toni Lapp

Although a Kansas state senator has told the Topeka Capital-Journal that the future of an autism bill being considered by her committee is “looking cloudier and cloudier,” autism advocates remain steadfast in their support for legislation to mandate health insurance coverage for autism therapy.

Kansas law requires any new mandated health insurance coverage apply only to the state health care benefits program before a mandate can be approved by the legislature for the general population. Kate’s Law (SB 12/HB 2367), backed by the Kansas Coalition for Autism Legislation, was written to be exempt from this statute, which some lawmakers are opposed to.
» READ MORE


Kate’s Law Defeated, But Supporters Are Not

By Jeff Nessel

Just after our son Elijah was born, my parents sent me one of those Hallmark style books about fathers and sons. You know the kind I mean, the one with the sage advice on how to raise your son using homespun sayings that greeting card companies love: Always play catch if your son asks, never be his best friend, always his father, teach him to respect his mother and he’ll always respect women. Unfortunately they never addressed what to do when you find out your son is on the autism spectrum, because in a Hallmark world autism spectrum disorders don’t exist. (Unless it’s the basis for a Hall of Fame Special.)
» READ MORE


Autism Asperger Publishing Co.

ADVERTISE

Advertise on SpectrumConnection.net and reach bistate families affected by autism.

» MORE INFO

ASK AN AUTISM SPECTRUM SPECIALIST

The Summer Break: A Catch-22?

By Jeanne Holverstott, M.S.

Question: It seems like summer can be full of pitfalls for my son with Asperger’s — the structure has gone away, and he’s no longer in contact with classmates. He is content to play on the computer all day, but seems to get moody more easily. Should we treat summer vacation as a long break from school-year stress, or what?  

Answer: Summer vacation presents a contradiction: Children with autism spectrum disorders thrive on structure, routine, consistency. Summer vacation throws these principles of ASD parenting and behavior management in flux.

» READ MORE

DEVELOPING TALENTS

Intervene, Intervene, Intervene

By Kate Duffy

A while back, Toni, the SpectrumConnection editor, asked me to write about how far parents should go to help their teens on the spectrum land a job. Since then, several of our Hot Topics parents have shared their kids’ job search stories with me, and I realized there was no easy answer to her question. For the most part, though, their stories revolved around the kids’ inability to accurately read situations, to remember instructions and to multitask to make a deadline. Looking at that list, it sounds like business as usual on the job for most of us — which is why it is so very important that our kids start learning about the world of work as soon as they can.

That’s why the short answer to Toni’s question is this: do what you need to do.

» READ MORE

AUTISM WIRE

ARCHIVES

TAGS

SUBSCRIBE BY RSS