Parenting Children with Special Needs Blog
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10/01/08

Benefit to Nebraska Safe Haven Law

Posted by : Kelly in Parenting Children with Special Needs Blog at 06:11 am , 500 words, 338 views  
Categories: Media

The Nebraska Safe Haven law was a very badly written law and the results were predictable. The law was very open ended and allowed parents to surrender children up to the age of 18. Then intent was to allow birth mothers the opportunity to relinquish a child they could not care for and prevent them from making other deadly decisions. Legislators could not agree on an upper age limit so they left it open to say “a child” and now teenagers are being surrendered.

There is a bright spot to this very bad law. USA Today ran an... more


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09/24/08

Mental Health Legislation

Posted by : Kelly in Parenting Children with Special Needs Blog at 07:02 pm , 435 words, 139 views  
Categories: In The News

There is a great piece of legislation that is being debated right now, and is long overdue for our kids.

The House and Senate both agree that the legislation is needed, they just differ on whether it stands on its own, or gets grouped together with some other things. What is this great piece of legislation?

It allows for mental health issues to be treated the same as medical issues. This means not limiting the number of treatments or sessions per year and allowing the same deductible as regular health insurance.

Interestingly, the proponents for... more

07/22/08

Teen Birth Rate and Homicides Are Up

Posted by : Julia Fuller in Parenting Children with Special Needs Blog at 07:02 pm , 442 words, 393 views  
Categories: In The News, Foster Care Adoption, What Needs to Be Changed

According to a new government report, the number of teens giving birth has risen for the first time in 15 years. For every one thousand young women, between the ages of 15 and 17, twenty-two will give birth. This may contribute to another unhealthy trend. The number of low birth weight newborns continues to increase. We know from statistics that youth in foster care are more likely to engage in risky behaviors than other teens are. Therefore, when you see an increase in the general population of teens, you can be sure the increase among foster youth is much higher. In fact,... more

06/20/08

The Sensory Processing Disorder Answer Book - Book Review

Posted by : Julia Fuller in Parenting Children with Special Needs Blog at 12:56 am , 502 words, 555 views  
Categories: Book Reviews, Indicators - Sensory Processing Disorder

The Sensory Processing Disorder Answer Book gives practical answers to the top 250 questions parents ask. Written by Tara Delaney, MS, OTR/L and published by Sourcebooks, Incorporated of Naperville, Illinois. Tara is a pediatric occupational therapist specializing in helping children with sensory processing disorder (SPD) and autism spectrum disorder (ASD). She also adopted a child internationally from China who came home with sensory processing issues.

True the covers says, “answers to the top 250 questions... more

04/30/08

A Must Read: The Elephant in the Playroom

Posted by : Julie in Parenting Children with Special Needs Blog at 06:36 am , 413 words, 557 views  
Categories: Book Reviews

If you read one book about parenting special needs children this year...this one is IT! The Elephant in the Playroom is a compilation of essays written by parents of children with special needs, and eloquently compiled by Denise Brodey, editor in chief of Fitness magazine, and mom to a son with sensory integration dysfunction. Ms Brodey has captured the very essence of life as the parent of a “special” kid. I found myself laughing, crying and furiously... more

04/25/08

April 25 Is World Malaria Day

Posted by : Julia Fuller in Parenting Children with Special Needs Blog at 07:25 pm , 410 words, 228 views  
Categories: In The News, Blood, Terminal Illness

Malaria can be deadly. Biting mosquitoes spread it and more than 1 million people, mostly children, die from Malaria each year. Malaria is preventable and it is treatable. Unfortunately, many areas that are affected by Malaria are impoverished. Therefore, the people do not have access to the medicines or tools to keep themselves and their families safe. Malaria is endemic in more than 100 countries and territories. World Malaria Day, April 25, hopes to build awareness to help put a stop to malaria... more


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04/15/08

Unforeseen Cell Phones Danger for Children

Posted by : Julia Fuller in Parenting Children with Special Needs Blog at 06:09 pm , 556 words, 468 views  
Categories: Sensory Integration/Processing, In The News

We have all heard about the dangers of using a cell phone while driving a car. Some metropolitan areas have made it illegal to talk on a cell phone while driving because of the many related accidents. Last week I wrote a blog on the dangers of brain tumors associated with cell phone use. Researchers are concerned about the long-term effects on developing children’s brains if adults are showing tumors within 10 years of cell phone use. Now we have another warning for our children regarding cell phone usage. Researchers have found that children may not be able to cross the... more

03/16/08

Inhalants Are the Drug of Choice for Those Becoming Teenagers

Posted by : Julia Fuller in Parenting Children with Special Needs Blog at 10:12 am , 439 words, 406 views  
Categories: In The News, Substance Abuse, Foster Care Adoption

Today’s children who are becoming teenagers are using inhalants more often than marijuana or prescription drugs. A new government report shows that inhaling common household products is the preferred way to get high for those becoming teenagers. According to health officials, household products like shoe polish, glue, aerosol air fresheners, hair sprays, nail polish, paint solvents, degreasers, gasoline, and lighter fluid are all possibilities for getting high. The results of the study were presented on Thursday at the National Press club in Washington, D.C. The National... more

02/29/08

More On Play

Posted by : Julie in Parenting Children with Special Needs Blog at 08:05 am , 544 words, 368 views  
Categories: A Day In the Life..., In The News

National Public Radio (NPR) did two segments on the importance of play recently. And I think they bear watching. In Old Fashioned Play Builds Serious Skills, it is pointed out that back before the mid-1950s play was not so much associated with toys as it was with unstructured free time. But the advent of television advertising and marketing to children has changed that.

Combine that with the push by parents to have children involved in organized activities and the lack of recess during... more

02/25/08

ADHD & Autism in the News

Posted by : Julie in Parenting Children with Special Needs Blog at 08:36 pm , 465 words, 402 views  
Categories: In The News

I ran across two articles today, both addressing some “alternative” approaches to autism. The first article, Diet change gives hyperactive kids new taste for life in Norway, is specifically about children diagnosed with ADHD. But the diet is the casein-free, gluten-free diet used by many families of children with autism. The article describes research following 23 children for the last decade who had been diagnosed with ADHD and had started casein-free, and in some cases, gluten-free diets.

All 23 of the children that were the part of this study were... more

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