HSA: Cutting autism support by $3 million is not good for kids

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"Government spin won't help autistic children and their families," HSA President Reid Johnson said today in response to a massive government cut in support for autistic children across British Columbia.

The Health Sciences Association of BC is the union that represents the team of health science professionals who work with children with autism spectrum disorder and their families, including autism intervention specialists, physiotherapists, occupational therapists, speech language pathologists, and social workers.

Last week, Children and Family Development Minister Mary Polak announced funding for autism services for children under age 6 would be cut by more than $3 million.

Polak tried to disguise the cut as an improvement in service, saying that eliminating a $5 million intensive therapy program for some autistic children allows the government to increase funding for all autistic children under age 6 from $20,000 to $22,000. Given the number of autistic children in the province, this actually reduces overall funding to the under 6 group by more than $3 million. Meanwhile, the $2,000 per child increase will barely cover the increase in service costs when families begin paying HST on autism services next year.

At Queen Alexandra Center for Child Health on Vancouver Island, staffing will be cut significantly, as more than 40 staff have received layoff notice.

Polak claims autistic children will still receive adequate services, but with significant layoffs of the health professionals who provide autism services, such as those at Queen Alexandra, families will have a harder time finding qualified professionals to provide these services.

"Any way you slice it, cutting autism support by $3 million is not good for kids," said Johnson.

Source:

HEALTH SCIENCES ASSOCIATION OF BRITISH COLUMBIA

Comments

  1. Bob He Bob He Canada says:

    You know we are living in dark days indeed when the government begins dismantling the therapy funding for helpless children. I suppose it is a smart move by the government as these children can’t voice their concern over the negative impact this will have on their future and huge increase in cost it will later have to society.

    Is this the type of government we voted for?

    Approximately one in a 150 boys is diagnosed with Autism and this continues to rise at an increasing rate.  

    In a recent 50 million dollar Lotto 6/49 jackpot, the odds were one in 13,983,816. Hundreds of thousands of parents bet on this jackpot. Your odds are considerably better with an Autism diagnosis.

    Save your lottery money, you will need it if your child is diagnosed.

    The government of British Columbia offers these families $20,000/year to cover therapy up to the age of six. Therapy costs approximately $80,000/year. This therapy is scientifically proven to be effective and is well documented. This means families who have a child who has been diagnosed with Autism have to find $60,000 from somewhere. This is often debt.

    Most of these parents divorce. Selling the family house to fund therapy is common. The sale of most items of value to generate funds for therapy is a given. A life of guilt and depression is to be expected. Alienation from friends and family will occur.

    Their life as they knew it is now over.

    If they are lucky their child won’t bolt and get lost for days. If they’re lucky their child will learn to refrain from self damaging behavior. If they’re lucky, their child will learn not to throw up after eating. If they’re lucky, their child will learn to speak a few words. If they’re lucky their child will not be teased, ridiculed, beaten up and harassed on a daily basis at school. If they’re lucky their child will graduate from high school.

    Most won’t be that lucky.

    Last week, without any consultation or warning, the Mary Polak (Minister of Family and Children Development) pulled the rug out from under these parents who are already enduring so much by eliminating their ability to control these funds. The government, who have consistently failed to understand the needs of these families has taken it upon itself to eliminate the option to do Direct Funding (direct from the parents to the service providers) and has instead dictated that these parents have to tow the line of mandated Invoice Funding where the government pays the service providers. This will increase overhead costs, delay the payments, reduce the quality of care and will make paying these service providers extremely difficult therefore reducing the amount of usable funds and discouraging assistance.

    The frustration in the Autism community lies in the fact that these parents, who are on the brink of financial collapse, already spent precious funds to fight the government in the courts a few years ago to protect their children and won the Auton lawsuit (Auton vs BC Gov). The government at that time did finally put Direct Individualized Funding into place.  This allowed parents to fund their child’s ABA programs and since that time parents have built a strong, quality base of ABA service providers that is making a real difference to these children. The ABA program takes a child who would otherwise be lifelong financial burden on the society and in many cases makes him/her self sufficient.

    In these financial times are we prepared to sacrifice the children? Do we want to go down this low moral road? Are we prepared to make the small amount of funds these parents receive that much less and that much more difficult to put into action? Why is the government spending more tax money just to make it difficult for these parents?

    For all that is good and decent, please spare the children.

The opinions expressed here are the views of the writer and do not necessarily reflect the views and opinions of News Medical.
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