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Showing posts with label Documentary. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Documentary. Show all posts
Friday, 26 June 2009
Friday, 19 June 2009
Autism Center must be saved
Quinn: Autism center must be saved By Adam Testa, The Southern
Thursday, June 18, 2009 10:55 PM CDT
CARBONDALE - Gov. Pat Quinn made his message clear within two minutes of walking into Southern Illinois University Carbondale's Wham Education Building, home of the Center for Autism Spectrum Disorders.
"We've got to save the program here," he said, shaking hands with center Director Tony Cuvo before a news conference. "We've got work to do."
The autism center was one of many stops Quinn has made recently on a statewide tour of social service entities, a tour many of his opponents have called fear-mongering.
Quinn, who is promoting citizen engagement in encouraging legislators to approve a state budget including a two-year, 50-percent income tax hike, decried those allegations, calling the tour "truth telling."
A state budget remains in gridlock in Springfield with a new fiscal year slated to begin July 1. A "doomsday" budget projects cuts of up to 50 percent to many of the state's social services, which Quinn said should not even be an option on the table.
"We have to have programs that help families stick together, stay together and move ahead," he said to a crowd of more than 100.
Cuvo addressed the crowd about the importance of the autism center and the role it plays in Southern Illinois. Through state funding, the center has assessed more than 460 children from the region, provided therapy to more than 120 of them, helped many autistic children transition into regular classrooms and affected the lives of families from about 115 communities across more than 30 counties, he said.
"They will have to go out of the region, including out of the state, to get diagnosed," Cuvo said of the effect the closure of the center, which would happen under the state's worst-case scenario budget. "It will be a very sad day for children with autism and their families throughout Illinois."
Quinn said he would not approve a budget that does not include an income tax increase and that cuts funding for essential social services. He also bashed a rumored possibility of operating the state budget on a month-by-month basis for six months, referring to it as the "juvenile way to go" and comparing it to the actions of his predecessor, ousted Gov. Rod Blagojevich.
"We are going to fight until our last day, until our last breath to save this program," Quinn said. "I don't want to cut the heart and soul of Illinois."
adam.testa@thesouthern.com, 618-351-5031
Thursday, June 18, 2009 10:55 PM CDT
CARBONDALE - Gov. Pat Quinn made his message clear within two minutes of walking into Southern Illinois University Carbondale's Wham Education Building, home of the Center for Autism Spectrum Disorders.
"We've got to save the program here," he said, shaking hands with center Director Tony Cuvo before a news conference. "We've got work to do."
The autism center was one of many stops Quinn has made recently on a statewide tour of social service entities, a tour many of his opponents have called fear-mongering.

A state budget remains in gridlock in Springfield with a new fiscal year slated to begin July 1. A "doomsday" budget projects cuts of up to 50 percent to many of the state's social services, which Quinn said should not even be an option on the table.
"We have to have programs that help families stick together, stay together and move ahead," he said to a crowd of more than 100.
Cuvo addressed the crowd about the importance of the autism center and the role it plays in Southern Illinois. Through state funding, the center has assessed more than 460 children from the region, provided therapy to more than 120 of them, helped many autistic children transition into regular classrooms and affected the lives of families from about 115 communities across more than 30 counties, he said.
"They will have to go out of the region, including out of the state, to get diagnosed," Cuvo said of the effect the closure of the center, which would happen under the state's worst-case scenario budget. "It will be a very sad day for children with autism and their families throughout Illinois."
Quinn said he would not approve a budget that does not include an income tax increase and that cuts funding for essential social services. He also bashed a rumored possibility of operating the state budget on a month-by-month basis for six months, referring to it as the "juvenile way to go" and comparing it to the actions of his predecessor, ousted Gov. Rod Blagojevich.
"We are going to fight until our last day, until our last breath to save this program," Quinn said. "I don't want to cut the heart and soul of Illinois."
adam.testa@thesouthern.com, 618-351-5031
We are working hard to save ours in KL too..
Wednesday, 6 May 2009
Genetic Risk Factors for Autism

Researchers have made an important step forward in understanding the complex genetic structure of autism spectrum disorders. A researcher collaboration, including geneticists from the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine and The Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP), have detected variations along a genetic pathway that is responsible for neurological development, learning and memory, which appears to play a significant role in the genetic risk of autism. Their findings were published online in the journal Nature on April 28.
Evidence suggests there is a strong genetic component increasing the likelihood of an autism diagnosis, estimated to impact 1 in 150 children in the United States. The study findings suggest that a particular genetic variation, found on a cluster between CDH10 and CDH9, is commonly found in children with autism, according to co-senior author Dr. Gerard Schellenberg, professor of pathology and laboratory medicine at the School of Medicine.
“We studied more than 10,000 children—of whom more than 4,500 had been diagnosed with an autism spectrum disorder—and found a common genetic variation that increases the risk of a child developing autism, along with a rarer genetic change that contributes to some cases of autism,” Dr. Schellenberg said. “This work yields important clues on what goes awry during development in children with autism and will help us focus on what is the cause of autism at a molecular level.” Cont...
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Toddler Brain Difference Linked to Autism
Story Highlights
(CNN) -- The size of a specific part of the brain may help experts pinpoint when autism could first develop, University of North Carolina researchers report.
Using MRI brain scans, researchers found that the area of the brain called the amygdala was, on average, 13 percent larger in young children with autism, compared with control group of children without autism. In the study, published in the latest Archives of General Psychiatry, researchers scanned 50 toddlers with autism and 33 children without autism at age 2 and again at age 4. The study adjusted for age, sex and IQ.
"We believe that children with autism have normal-sized brains at birth but at some point, in the latter part of the first year of life, it [the amygdala] begins to grow in kids with autism. And this study gives us insight inside the underlying brain mechanism so we can design more rational interventions," said lead study author Dr. Joseph Piven. cont...
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- Study: The amygdala in toddlers with autism is 13 percent larger than unaffected kids
- Size of brain area linked to ability to process faces as friend or foe
- Autism is believed to affect as many as 1 in 150 children
- University of North Carolina researchers hope findings result in earlier intervention

Using MRI brain scans, researchers found that the area of the brain called the amygdala was, on average, 13 percent larger in young children with autism, compared with control group of children without autism. In the study, published in the latest Archives of General Psychiatry, researchers scanned 50 toddlers with autism and 33 children without autism at age 2 and again at age 4. The study adjusted for age, sex and IQ.
"We believe that children with autism have normal-sized brains at birth but at some point, in the latter part of the first year of life, it [the amygdala] begins to grow in kids with autism. And this study gives us insight inside the underlying brain mechanism so we can design more rational interventions," said lead study author Dr. Joseph Piven. cont...
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Monday, 4 May 2009
Transfer Factor, What Say You?

I am setting up this posting call "Transfer Factor, What say you?" and hope I can either cut and paste your experience without mentioning name and detail. What I want to do is to gather information for the benefit of parents in Malaysia or third world countries especially in Asia.
Please either email me your experience or comment it online anonymously online. Your experience and insight to the above will greatly help.
Regards
Shiok Guy
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Thursday, 30 April 2009
Autism researchers announce breakthrough in identifying gene
Autism researchers announce breakthrough in identifying gene
Autism researchers at UM and other universities announced a genetic breakthrough that could lead to improved treatment and prevention of the disorder.
Researchers say they have found the first piece of the genetic puzzle that could lead to greatly improved diagnosis, treatment and even prevention of autism.
A multi-university team, which included the University of Miami School of Medicine, has identified a gene associated with autism, according to a report published Tuesday in the peer-reviewed medical journal Nature. Full article at Maimi Herald
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Researchers say they have found the first piece of the genetic puzzle that could lead to greatly improved diagnosis, treatment and even prevention of autism.
A multi-university team, which included the University of Miami School of Medicine, has identified a gene associated with autism, according to a report published Tuesday in the peer-reviewed medical journal Nature. Full article at Maimi Herald
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Friday, 24 April 2009
I Dreamed a Dream
47 Year old Susan Boyle wows the judges with her performance in the auditions for Britains Got Talent, singing I dreamed a dream from Les Miserables.
Watch her here, and remember to have a tissue box around. Please do share how you feel when you watch this video!
Here are the Lyrics:
I dreamed a dream in time gone by
When hope was high,
And life worth living
I dreamed that love would never die
I dreamed that God would be forgiving.
Then I was young and unafraid
When dreams were made and used,
And wasted
There was no ransom to be paid
No song unsung,
No wine untasted.
But the tigers come at night
With their voices soft as thunder
As they tear your hopes apart
As they turn your dreams to shame.
And still I dream he'll come to me
And we will live our lives together
But there are dreams that cannot be
And there are storms
We cannot weather...
I had a dream my life would be
So different from this hell I'm living
So different now from what it seems
Now life has killed
The dream I dreamed.
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Watch her here, and remember to have a tissue box around. Please do share how you feel when you watch this video!
Here are the Lyrics:
I dreamed a dream in time gone by
When hope was high,
And life worth living
I dreamed that love would never die
I dreamed that God would be forgiving.
Then I was young and unafraid
When dreams were made and used,
And wasted
There was no ransom to be paid
No song unsung,
No wine untasted.
But the tigers come at night
With their voices soft as thunder
As they tear your hopes apart
As they turn your dreams to shame.
And still I dream he'll come to me
And we will live our lives together
But there are dreams that cannot be
And there are storms
We cannot weather...
I had a dream my life would be
So different from this hell I'm living
So different now from what it seems
Now life has killed
The dream I dreamed.
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Tuesday, 21 April 2009
Healing Autism With Horses
Healing Autism With Horses
Erin Trieb for The New York Times “The Horse Boy” author Rupert Isaacson and his son Rowan in Elgin, Tex.

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Ten Things Every Child With Autism Wishes You Knew
Ten Things
Every Child with Autism Wishes You Knew
by Ellen Notbohm
from the book Ten Things Every Child with Autism Wishes You Knew (2005, Future Horizons, Inc.)
Reprinted in its entirety with permission of author
S
ome days it seems the only predictable thing about it is the unpredictability. The only consistent attribute -- the inconsistency. There is little argument on any level but that autism is baffling, even to those who spend their lives around it. The child who lives with autism may look “normal” but his behavior can be perplexing and downright difficult.
Autism was once thought an “incurable” disorder, but that notion is crumbling in the face knowledge and understanding that is increasing even as you read this. Every day, individuals with autism are showing us that they can overcome, compensate for and otherwise manage many of autism’s most challenging characteristics. Equipping those around our children with simple understanding of autism’s most basic elements has a tremendous impact on their ability to journey towards productive, independent adulthood.

Autism is an extremely complex disorder but for purposes of this one article, we can distill its myriad characteristics into four fundamental areas: sensory processing challenges, speech/language delays and impairments, the elusive social interaction skills and whole child/self-esteem issues. And though these four elements may be common to many children, keep front-of-mind the fact that autism is a spectrum disorder: no two (or ten or twenty) children with autism will be completely alike. Every child will be at a different point on the spectrum. And, just as importantly – every parent, teacher and caregiver will be at a different point on the spectrum. Child or adult, each will have a unique set of needs.
Here are ten things every child with autism wishes you knew:
1. I am first and foremost a child. My autism is only one aspect of my total character. It does not define me as a person. Are you a person with thoughts, feelings and many talents, or are you just fat (overweight), myopic (wear glasses) or klutzy (uncoordinated, not good at sports)? Those may be things that I see first when I meet you, but they are not necessarily what you are all about.
As an adult, you have some control over how you define yourself. If you want to single out a single characteristic, you can make that known. As a child, I am still unfolding. Neither you nor I yet know what I may be capable of. Defining me by one characteristic runs the danger of setting up an expectation that may be too low. And if I get a sense that you don’t think I “can do it,” my natural response will be: Why try?
2. My sensory perceptions are disordered. Sensory integration may be the most difficult aspect of autism to understand, but it is arguably the most critical. It his means that the ordinary sights, sounds, smells, tastes and touches of everyday that you may not even notice can be downright painful for me. The very environment in which I have to live often seems hostile. I may appear withdrawn or belligerent to you but I am really just trying to defend myself. Here is why a “simple” trip to the grocery store may be hell for me:
My hearing may be hyper-acute. Dozens of people are talking at once. The loudspeaker booms today’s special. Musak whines from the sound system. Cash registers beep and cough, a coffee grinder is chugging. The meat cutter screeches, babies wail, carts creak, the fluorescent lighting hums. My brain can’t filter all the input and I’m in overload!
My sense of smell may be highly sensitive. The fish at the meat counter isn’t quite fresh, the guy standing next to us hasn’t showered today, the deli is handing out sausage samples, the baby in line ahead of us has a poopy diaper, they’re mopping up pickles on aisle 3 with ammonia….I can’t sort it all out. I am dangerously nauseated.
Because I am visually oriented (see more on this below), this may be my first sense to become overstimulated. The fluorescent light is not only too bright, it buzzes and hums. The room seems to pulsate and it hurts my eyes. The pulsating light bounces off everything and distorts what I am seeing -- the space seems to be constantly changing. There’s glare from windows, too many items for me to be able to focus (I may compensate with "tunnel vision"), moving fans on the ceiling, so many bodies in constant motion. All this affects my vestibular and proprioceptive senses, and now I can’t even tell where my body is in space.
3. Please remember to distinguish between won’t (I choose not to) and can’t (I am not able to).
Receptive and expressive language and vocabulary can be major challenges for me. It isn’t that I don’t listen to instructions. It’s that I can’t understand you. When you call to me from across the room, this is what I hear: “*&^%$#@, Billy. #$%^*&^%$&*………” Instead, come speak directly to me in plain words: “Please put your book in your desk, Billy. It’s time to go to lunch.” This tells me what you want me to do and what is going to happen next. Now it is much easier for me to comply.
4. I am a concrete thinker. This means I interpret language very literally. It’s very confusing for me when you say, “Hold your horses, cowboy!” when what you really mean is “Please stop running.” Don’t tell me something is a “piece of cake” when there is no dessert in sight and what you really mean is “this will be easy for you to do.” When you say “Jamie really burned up the track,” I see a kid playing with matches. Please just tell me “Jamie ran very fast.”
Idioms, puns, nuances, double entendres, inference, metaphors, allusions and sarcasm are lost on me.
5. Please be patient with my limited vocabulary. It’s hard for me to tell you what I need when I don’t know the words to describe my feelings. I may be hungry, frustrated, frightened or confused but right now those words are beyond my ability to express. Be alert for body language, withdrawal, agitation or other signs that something is wrong.
Or, there’s a flip side to this: I may sound like a “little professor” or movie star, rattling off words or whole scripts well beyond my developmental age. These are messages I have memorized from the world around me to compensate for my language deficits because I know I am expected to respond when spoken to. They may come from books, TV, the speech of other people. It is called “echolalia.” I don’t necessarily understand the context or the terminology I’m using. I just know that it gets me off the hook for coming up with a reply.
6. Because language is so difficult for me, I am very visually oriented. Please show me how to do something rather than just telling me. And please be prepared to show me many times. Lots of consistent repetition helps me learn.
A visual schedule is extremely helpful as I move through my day. Like your day-timer, it relieves me of the stress of having to remember what comes next, makes for smooth transition between activities, helps me manage my time and meet your expectations.
I won’t lose the need for a visual schedule as I get older, but my “level of representation” may change. Before I can read, I need a visual schedule with photographs or simple drawings. As I get older, a combination of words and pictures may work, and later still, just words.
7. Please focus and build on what I can do rather than what I can’t do. Like any other human, I can’t learn in an environment where I’m constantly made to feel that I’m not good enough and that I need “fixing.” Trying anything new when I am almost sure to be met with criticism, however “constructive,” becomes something to be avoided. Look for my strengths and you will find them. There is more than one “right” way to do most things.
8. Please help me with social interactions. It may look like I don’t want to play with the other kids on the playground, but sometimes it’s just that I simply do not know how to start a conversation or enter a play situation. If you can encourage other children to invite me to join them at kickball or shooting baskets, it may be that I’m delighted to be included.
I do best in structured play activities that have a clear beginning and end. I don’t know how to “read” facial expressions, body language or the emotions of others, so I appreciate ongoing coaching in proper social responses. For example, if I laugh when Emily falls off the slide, it’s not that I think it’s funny. It’s that I don’t know the proper response. Teach me to say “Are you OK?”
9. Try to identify what triggers my meltdowns. Meltdowns, blow-ups, tantrums or whatever you want to call them are even more horrid for me than they are for you. They occur because one or more of my senses has gone into overload. If you can figure out why my meltdowns occur, they can be prevented. Keep a log noting times, settings, people, activities. A pattern may emerge.
Try to remember that all behavior is a form of communication. It tells you, when my words cannot, how I perceive something that is happening in my environment.
Parents, keep in mind as well: persistent behavior may have an underlying medical cause. Food allergies and sensitivities, sleep disorders and gastrointestinal problems can all have profound effects on behavior.
10. Love me unconditionally. Banish thoughts like, “If he would just……” and “Why can’t she…..” You did not fulfill every last expectation your parents had for you and you wouldn’t like being constantly reminded of it. I did not choose to have autism. But remember that it is happening to me, not you. Without your support, my chances of successful, self-reliant adulthood are slim. With your support and guidance, the possibilities are broader than you might think. I promise you – I am worth it.
And finally, three words: Patience. Patience. Patience. Work to view my autism as a different ability rather than a disability. Look past what you may see as limitations and see the gifts autism has given me. It may be true that I’m not good at eye contact or conversation, but have you noticed that I don’t lie, cheat at games, tattle on my classmates or pass judgment on other people? Also true that I probably won’t be the next Michael Jordan. But with my attention to fine detail and capacity for extraordinary focus, I might be the next Einstein. Or Mozart. Or Van Gogh.
They may have had autism too.
The answer to Alzheimer’s, the enigma of extraterrestrial life -- what future achievements from today’s children with autism, children like me, lie ahead?
All that I might become won’t happen without you as my foundation. Be my advocate, be my friend, and we’ll see just how far I can go.
© 2005, 2009 Ellen Notbohm
Please contact the author for permission to reproduce in any way, including re-posting on the Internet.
Ellen Notbohm is author of Ten Things Every Child with Autism Wishes You Knew, Ten Things Your Student with Autism Wishes You Knew, and The Autism Trail Guide: Postcards from the Road Less Traveled, all ForeWord Book of the Year finalists. She is also co-author of the award-winning 1001 Great Ideas for Teaching and Raising Children with Autism Spectrum Disorders, a columnist for Autism Asperger’s Digest and Children’s Voice, and a contributor to numerous publications and websites around the world. To contact Ellen or explore her work, please visit www.ellennotbohm.com .
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Tuesday, 14 April 2009
UNICEF: Programme gives early warning of autism in Malaysia

Malaysia's Ministry of Health reports that autism cases are on the rise. Unfortunately, most cases are not detected until children are already in school. While there is no cure for autism, early treatment during toddler and preschool years can reduce its effects and improve a child's development.
UNICEF and the Ministry of Health are working to help clinics and hospitals detect autism at an earlier age. A pilot programme is training medical professionals -- including psychiatrists, paediatricians, therapists and nurses -- on identifying and following up with children who may be autistic.
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Sunday, 12 April 2009
The Secret

Whether you Belief in It or Not, do watch these videos and think about it. Do apply the following next time when you are looking for car park; instead of worrying about no parking, just imagine how happy and delighted you are going to be with plenty of empty parking lot. Ask for someone to leave their lot and belief it will happen, drive around with the request and belief in you mind. The chances are you will happily get what you want. Belief in Positive!
The Secret: 1st 20 minutes
Bob Proctor on The Secret
The following article is copied from Today is that Day without permission.
********
Did you ever seen the original Terminator movie?
There was one part where the psychologist is saying that Reese is crazy, and that his belief in the Terminators being from the future is the perfect fantasy because it doesn't require a shred of evidence.
The Law of Attraction is just like that!
Whether you are a believer or a non-believer there is absolutely no way to prove that you are right - or that you are wrong.

Much like the concept of religion, you see what you want to see when it comes to the Law of Attraction.
Believers will tell you that everything they manifested was a direct result of them properly following the LOA principles.
However, non-believers will try some of the techniques, not see astounding results, and exclaim (if I may borrow James Arthur Ray's comments):
"This stuff doesn't work!"
To once again compare conscious creation to religion, most people will say that having faith or belief is the key to invoking the almighty powers that be.
However, just like religion, if you see (or don't see) results when using the Law of Attraction it is quite impossible to prove beyond a shadow of a doubt that the LOA was responsible for your results - or lack thereof.
This becomes even more apparent (and non-believers will love this) when the acquisition of dreams by people who use the LOA always and only end up coming about as the result of very down-to-earth and explainable events.
Believers will say that those events would never have happened if it hadn't been for their faith and proper application of the methods, while non-believers will say that the whole thing is a bunch of nonsense.
Who is right?
What if someone were to come up to you and ask you for irrefutable evidence that your faith in and proper practice of your religion was responsible for some amazing turn of events in your life?
Could you prove scientifically that your religion was the direct and only cause for that turn of events?
And before someone calls out the dogs and wants to burn me at the stake for sacrilege, I am not saying that people should not honor their religious beliefs.Quite to the contrary, actually.
If your belief in your religion and your faith in your deity is what allows you to believe that you need to make a conscious effort to live a proper lifestyle, and that you will be rewarded for doing so, then by all means, please keep the faith.
After all, that is exactly what is expected of LOA believers. There are methods and systems for properly and deliberately creating the life that you want to live, and if you fail to honor those guidelines, you don't get what you wanted.
So, is the whole Law of Attraction thing just a scam that is being pulled on the world at large just to line the pockets of a few choice individuals?
Or maybe it is just a belief system that provides a guideline for how to live a prosperous and wonderful life.
There is no way to know, because as I mentioned before, the entire thing - whether you believe it or not - does not require a shred of scientific evidence.
You know. Just like religion.
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A Piece Of The Puzzle The ABA Story
A Documentary on autism and a possible treatment for it: ABA Therapy or Applied Behavioral Analysis. Directed By: Stephen Venezia
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Thursday, 9 April 2009
My Family and Autism from 2003
Wednesday, 28 January 2009
Falling Short
Wednesday January 28, 2009
Falling short
ONE VOICE By PANG HIN YUE
The Persons With Disabilities Act 2008 has been reduced to a mere administrative document. Who then can the disabled turn to for help?
UNLIKE previous seminars held at the Bar Council headquarters, there was a conspicuous absence of Special Branch officers at the recent talk on “Persons with Disabilities Act 2008: What Next?”
The Bar Council’s Human Rights Committee chairman, Edmund Bon, reckoned it was because the disabled community was perceived as “non-threatening”.
It may not have had the tension and drama that come with some of the more explosive issues that the Bar Council had attempted to address, but it was no less emotionally-charged. No less gut-wrenching, when participants shared how time and again they had been discriminated against by a system that was divided by the them-and-us polemics.
Among them was Christine Lee of Barrier-Free Environment and Accessible Transport (BEAT). Even though the Persons With Disabilities Act (PWDA) had come into force last July to accord equal rights to the disabled, Lee still found herself being discriminated against on account of her physical disability.
Just two days before the Bar Council meeting, she was invited to speak at a hotel. However, upon reaching the hotel, she discovered there was no parking space allocated for wheelchair users, forcing her to park her car at the VIP bay. The hotel staff warned that if she did, they would clamp her car. Sure enough, after her talk, she found her car clamped and was told to pay a fine.
“Why should I be made to pay for a service the hotel had failed to provide?” Lee asked. It was only after talking to the senior hotel management staff that they released her car without imposing a fine on her.
How ironic that Lee was penalised when the builders of the hotel had flouted the Uniform Building By-Laws by failing to provide facilities for the disabled. This incident underscores the fact that despite being touted as a rights-based law, the PWDA is silent on sanctions and penalties against parties that discriminate against the disabled.
As president of the Malaysian Bar Council Datuk Ambiga Sreenevasan noted: “There is no provision for any penalty for any party who does not live up to the obligations under the Act. In fact, (under Section 41 of the Act), the Federal Government is expressly excluded from any wrong-doing for any failure to address the needs of persons with disabilities.”

She added that although the Act states that persons with disabilities (PWD) have the right to enjoy the benefits of public transport, housing, education, employment and healthcare, it does not offer remedies if they face discrimination in these areas.
Bon admitted that many lawyers are unaware of issues confronting the disabled and urged the latter to bring their grievances to the law fraternity so that both parties could work together to push for equal rights for the disabled.
The participants testified that access to public transport, buildings and amenities remains the bane of the physically challenged. Even though it is compulsory for developers to incorporate features such as ramps and disabled-friendly toilets and car parks under the Uniform Building By-Laws, enforcement is sorely lacking.
Securing insurance is another mission impossible. For the learning disabled community that includes persons with Down syndrome, autism and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, access to services to enhance cognition and to overcome sensorial problems, remains elusive.
The Special Education regulations under the Education Act, for instance, has a discriminatory clause that states only those who are “educable” are admitted to school.
Is it then possible to use the PWDA to compel the Education Ministry to amend the regulations?
Lawyer Helen Chin, an advocate for the learning disabled, pointed out that Section 28 of the PWDA states that persons with disabilities shall not be excluded from the general education system on the basis of their disability. “For the purpose of streamlining current legislation relating to special education, the term ‘educable’ should be deleted to avoid inconsistency and ambiguity,” Chin asserted.
Given the multi-faceted issues affecting the physically and mentally disabled, how is it that the PWDA seems to fall short of expectations? Perhaps the history of how it came about could shed some light.
In 2002, when representatives from various organisations were roped in to form a committee to draft the Bill, they rejoiced. They laboured over it for the next five years, raising salient points to be included in the Bill.
Among them was Bathmavathi Krishnan, secretary of the Malaysian Confederation of the Disabled.
But to their dismay, when the Bill was tabled and passed in Parliament late 2007, they realised it had deviated from the original draft. “It was a very much watered down version of the original,” said Bathmavathi.
Thus the PWDA had been reduced to what she called, “an administrative document which merely imposes obligatory responsibilities on the various ministries to undertake certain actions to improve the lives of PWDs. Without any sanctions for non-compliance, it renders the Act almost ineffective.”
Lawyer Mah Hassan Omar who is president of the Malaysian Confederation of the Blind and who presided over the committee said: “The final version (of the Act) was far different from the original draft and people with disabilities were not fully consulted for the final document.”
Under the Act, the Minister of Women, Family and Community Development is vested with power to appoint a maximum of 10 persons whom she deems as having appropriate experience, knowledge and expertise to be in the National Council for Persons with Disabilities. The council also has members representing nine ministries, including the the secretary-generals of finance, transport, health, human resources and education.
The secretary-general of the Housing and Local Government Ministry, strangely, is not in the council.
The council is expected to meet three times a year to review, recommend, implement and advise on various measures affecting the disabled. Towards this end, the Department for the Development of Persons with Disabilities will be created to assist the council in the areas of registration, protection, rehabilitation, development and well-being of PWDs.
While the Act is silent on protecting the rights of the disabled by way of imposing sanctions and penalties, it is explicit in shielding the council in that no party is allowed to take legal action against it.
Despite the hiccups, it is hoped that through other sections of the Act, there is room for the disabled to seek redress. Under Section 43 of the Act, the minister is given power to introduce regulations. It is hoped that through this provision, Datuk Dr Ng Yen Yen who took over the portfolio after the March 2008 election, will bring about the necessary reforms to make the Act air-tight.
Further, Section 13 states that the Council can recommend changes to existing laws or propose new ones to improve the lives of the disabled. “This area should be fully exploited,” stressed Bathmavathi.
She proposed that Article 8(2) of the Federal Constitution be amended to outlaw discrimination against the disabled. She urged the Minister in her capacity as the Council’s chairman, to institute Section 46 to amend the PWDA to include sanctions and penalties for non-compliance. And to ensure the Council acts without fear or favour, Bon proposes that a Shadow Council be established as well.
Although Dr Ng is barely one year into her new job, the burden is on her, being the key person vested with power under the PWDA, to do what is right for the 2.7 million PWDs in Malaysia.
- One Voice is a monthly column which serves as a platform for professionals, parents and careproviders of children with learning difficulties. Feedback on the column can be sent to onevoice4ld@gmail.com.
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Tuesday, 10 June 2008
Need to detect autism at early stage
Need to detect autism at early stage
By SALINA KHALID
Photos by GLENN GUAN
ALTHOUGH more people are now aware of autism, there are no statistics on how many are affected by the condition in the country.
National Autism Society of Malaysia chairman (Nasom) Teh Beng Choon said without statistics, it was difficult for the society to assess the real situation locally.
“We have been going around to various organisations, including the relevant autho-rities, to gather information on prevalence of the condition yet nobody has the statistics.
“So we have to rely on the international figures and make an assumption about the local scenario,” he said.
He added that according to the international statistics in the 1980s, the incidence of autism in children was one in every 500.

Locally, there are about 3,000 cases of autism, with about 500 new ones diagnosed every year. The degree of autism ranges from mild to severe.
“Autism is a neurological disorder, not a psychological one, so it does not have anything to do with behavioural problems or those affected being naughty,” he added.
Autism is a complex developmental disorder that manifests in the first three years of life. It affects the brain’s normal development of social and communication skills.
Yet, in most cases, especially in this country, the condition is not diagnosed until much later.
Common features of autism include impaired social interaction, impaired verbal and non-verbal communication, problems with processing information from the senses, and restricted and repetitive patterns of behaviour.
The symptoms, however, may vary from moderate to severe.
Some autistic children are withdrawn and unable to follow complicated instructions, which leads to them becoming outcasts or considered as stubborn children.
Among the symptoms of autism are inappropriate laughing, no fear of real danger, apparent insensitivity to pain, difficulty in socialising with other children, crying tantrums, unusual eye contact, a tendency to spin objects and resisting changes in routine.
Teh added that autism was four times more common in males than in females. It is not a problem associated with poor parenting.

“Autism is a life-long condition. It affects every aspect of a person’s life and there is no cure,” he said.
He called on the relevant authorities, including the Health Ministry and Welfare Department, to set up a registry for autism so that every child could be screened to enable early detection of the condition. More awareness programmes should also be organised for the public, he said.
Nasom is a non-profit, non-government welfare organisation that aims mainly to boost awareness of autism together with well-established and newly-developed approaches in the diagnosis, assessment, education and treatment of people with autism. Established in 1986 by a group of parents and concerned citizens, the organisation also aims to improve the quality of life for people with autism.
With 17 centres throughout the country, the organisation offers life-long services to people with autism.
“However, what’s lacking is the sense of urgency when it comes to autism.
“Knowledge about autism is still low in the country and a lot of people do not know about the condition.
“That is why autistic children are often thought to have behavioural problems or to be simply naughty,” said Teh during an interview at the Nasom centre in Subang Jaya 3C’s (Children Creative Centre) complex.
To boost awareness of the importance of early detection of the condition, the association has organised a series of campaigns that includes talks and seminars on the subject for parents and the public.
“We try to provide basic training for the children, including academic and daily routine that we take for granted.
“Our teachers are professionally trained to teach autistic children.
“We are glad that most of the children have shown tremendous improvement over the years,” he said.
Teh added that Nasom depended on donations from the public to support its cause.
It needs at least RM2.5mil per year to fund all the centres.
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Thursday, 24 April 2008
About Autism
About autism
AUTISM is a neurological condition that impedes a person’s learning, speech, senses and social skills in varying degrees. It affects one in every 150 persons, with a higher prevalence among males. Scientists in the West say the incidence of autism will continue to rise globally even as the root causes of autism – genes, environmental factors, heavy metal poisoning, diet and vaccines – are being debated.
There is, however, no argument that proper interventions can make a world of difference for persons with autism.
Ideally, intensive therapies to modify behaviour, enhance muscle usage to help with speech, writing and body balance, and the teaching of social skills should be made available to persons with autism.
The role of the psychologist (to chart development and ascertain types of intervention to enhance learning), psychiatrist (where persons with autism need medication and counselling), sensory integration therapist, speech therapist, behavioural therapist and teacher aides is crucial to the progress of an autistic person. Parental involvement is vital in tailoring individualised educational programmes for students with autism.
In Malaysia, the following public hospitals provide assessments and counselling for families with special needs: Hospital UKM, KL General Hospital, Selayang Hospital, University Malaya Medical Centre and Klang Hospital.
The National Autism Society of Malaysia (Nasom) set up its one-stop centre three years ago, offering services such as assessments, interventions and counselling.

For details on services offered by Nasom, call 03-4022 3744, website: www.nasom.com.my.
There is, however, no argument that proper interventions can make a world of difference for persons with autism.
Ideally, intensive therapies to modify behaviour, enhance muscle usage to help with speech, writing and body balance, and the teaching of social skills should be made available to persons with autism.
The role of the psychologist (to chart development and ascertain types of intervention to enhance learning), psychiatrist (where persons with autism need medication and counselling), sensory integration therapist, speech therapist, behavioural therapist and teacher aides is crucial to the progress of an autistic person. Parental involvement is vital in tailoring individualised educational programmes for students with autism.
In Malaysia, the following public hospitals provide assessments and counselling for families with special needs: Hospital UKM, KL General Hospital, Selayang Hospital, University Malaya Medical Centre and Klang Hospital.
The National Autism Society of Malaysia (Nasom) set up its one-stop centre three years ago, offering services such as assessments, interventions and counselling.

For details on services offered by Nasom, call 03-4022 3744, website: www.nasom.com.my.
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