From Fox News:
“New York coronavirus policy
harming disabled youth, parents say: 'The regression is devastating'”
(Lucas Spina, 5, is regressing in
his walking abilities amid the pandemic)
Christopher Heisel of Long
Island, N.Y., was once able to take 30 steps with help from his gait trainer.
The child, who suffers from cerebral palsy, could sit up on his own and feed
himself. Due to the closure of in-person therapies amid the coronavirus
pandemic, however, Christopher, 10, can no longer bear any weight on his legs.
Little to no wrist strength has left him unable to hold a spoon. “This has been
a very difficult situation for him, the regression is so devastating and it’s
just been so much within such a short amount of time,” his mother, Kristy
Heisel, told Fox News. “All the work we have done is gone.” Occupational and
physical therapy, as well as speech, hearing, and vision services, turned to
teletherapy, Zoom sessions, and email during the pandemic. But these methods
may not suffice for disabled children who thrive on in-person therapy and rigid
routines. Professors at the University of Nevada, Reno (UNR) recently detailed
the importance of routine and structure for children with disabilities. “When
kids have predictable routines, problem behaviors are less likely,” according to UNR's MaryAnn Demchak, professor of special
education and disability studies, and Chevonne Sutter, project coordinator for
the Nevada Dual Sensory Impairment Project. “Problem behaviors are sometimes a
way for children with disabilities to communicate their frustration or tell
their parents what they want." A group of parents across Long Island
recently shared with Fox News accounts of their disabled children’s regression
and their growing frustration amid the closure of in-person services.
A community of more than 1,000
concerned parents and individuals have assembled through a Facebook group
called “Make IDEAs Happen NY" after the co-administrators, Jamie Scalise,
a student at St. Joseph’s College in Patchogue, and Kerri Faithfull, whose son
suffers from a speech disorder known as childhood apraxia of speech (CAS), set
out to make a change, conducting surveys and writing letters to local and state
elected officials. But Scalise claims that the group has yet to receive a
response. The group is advocating for a full return of one-on-one services such
as physical and occupational therapy as well as speech, hearing, vision, and
eating therapies. These therapies are mandated by special needs students'
individualized education programs (IEPs) through New York State. The group is
not calling for a full reopening of schools for all students due to the
possible health risks of doing so, they said. Gov. Cuomo’s New York on PAUSE
executive order, issued March 22, brought sweeping closures for nonessential
businesses and schools statewide. On June 5, Cuomo signed an order allowing
public school districts to offer in-person special education services for the
2020 summer term if they could do so safely. “Notwithstanding any prior
Executive Order to the contrary, special education services, and instruction
required under Federal, state or local laws, rules, or regulations, may be
provided in person for the summer term in school districts. Any district providing
such services in person must follow State and Federal guidance,” the order
states.
Overall, New York has come a long
way from the onset of the pandemic; New York City was once considered the
country’s epicenter. But as Long Island, in particular, moved through the
various phases of reopening, including many personal services like barbershops
and nail salons, many parents with disabled children remained at home as
teletherapy continued. “We feel like these kids were kind of lost in a loophole
where people just forgot about their needs, which are more essential than any
of those that we just listed [such as barbershops],” Matthew Ratto told Fox
News. Ratto's 2-year-old daughter, Margaret, suffers from cerebral palsy. A
call to the governor's office about the parents' concerns was referred to New
York’s Office for People with Developmental Disabilities (OPWDD). On July 15,
the OPWDD announced new guidelines allowing the resumption of home visits,
community outings, and day habilitation services for regions of the state that
entered into Phase 4 of Cuomo’s New York Forward Reopening Plan. However, day
habilitation services are only for special needs individuals over the age of
21. “OPWDD has taken the threat of COVID-19 to the people we support very
seriously and immediately paused congregate in-person day services at the onset
of the public health emergency to limit the spread of the virus, replacing them
wherever possible with virtual services and direct services provided in smaller
residential settings,” Jennifer O’Sullivan, OPWDD spokesperson, wrote in an
email statement to Fox News. Scalise said to Fox News: “Unfortunately, although
day facilities have been able to reopen as of July 15, school-aged children are
not impacted by this decision." She called the order “vague" and
added that it left out a majority of special education students without
in-person education and related services. Scalise estimated that more than 75
percent of kids part of the Make IDEAS Happen NY are still not receiving
in-person therapy, though some parents in the group took matters into their own
hands, managing to get some in-person therapy for their children through
outpatient centers. "We can't hold a governor accountable for knowing
everything about every aspect of their job," Scalise continued. "We
can't expect him to be exposed to children with such intense needs. We’re not
placing blame, we’re just hoping to get traction and some attention toward this
issue."
On July 31, all districts and
schools in New York were required to provide reopening plans at the school
level, posted on the schools' public websites, and required to have mandatory
elements outlined in NYSED’s School Reopening Guidance Document. This document
requires schools and districts to provide “a free appropriate public education
consistent with the need to protect the health and safety of students with
disabilities and those providing special education and services…” Scalise said:
“Our continued fear is that in the case that schools reopen in the fall, an
increased number of cases will lead to school closures once again, preventing
our vulnerable population from receiving these services essential to their
well-being and quality of life." Kerri Faithfull, one of the
co-administrators of Make IDEAS Happen NY, has a 4-year-old son, Lucas, who
suffers from the speech disorder CAS. Before the pandemic, speech therapists at
the private Opportunity Pre-School in Hauppauge worked with the child four
times each week. These therapists are certified in PROMPT therapy, in which the
therapist physically touches a person’s face to help make progress with speech.
When the pre-school remained closed during the pandemic, Faithfull removed the
school's responsibility for the therapy sessions and sent her son to an
outpatient agency instead. The services are covered by the school, though two
of the four weekly sessions are provided as teletherapy. "It kind of left
it up to districts of schools," said Faithfull, speaking to Cuomo’s June 5
executive order. “I happen to be knowledgeable in the area, and so I knew that
[an outpatient agency] was an option. Most parents did not realize that was an
option. I don’t think most parents were able to make a decision like that,”
Faithfull explained, adding that many school districts were unwilling to pay
for a child to go to outpatient. “While Lucas still has a long way to go and
his speech therapist is very concerned about the lack of his vocal volume, as
well as his number of sounds that he used to consistently say, at least he’s
starting to get on the right track, wherewith most children who receive their
services through school, that’s not the case,” she said.
Danielle Spina told a similar
story. Spina said her 5-year-old son, also named Lucas, was born at 28 weeks
and suffered a stroke upon birth which led to hydrocephalus, or water on the
brain. A dozen brain surgeries followed, with more reconstructive surgeries yet
to come, she claimed. “I’m his mom, I’m not his therapist,” Spina said. “It’s
easy to say, ‘Pick him up and make him walk.' But am I doing it the right way?
Am I hurting him? Possibly, who knows.”
^ Sadly we are hearing way too
many of these kinds of stories from across the country and around the world.
Too many of the vulnerable are being “sacrificed” and allowed to fall through
the cracks and if anyone questions their treatment they are given the excuse that
Covid-19 is new and so abandoning them is allowed. ^
https://www.foxnews.com/health/new-york-coronavirus-policy-disabled-youth-regression?yptr=yahoo
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