Monday, March 9, 2009

Autism program gets parents involved in developing kids communication skills

From the intro to a story in the Las Vegas Review-Journal. In the picture, Alex Britz, 11, sits in his mother's lap during a Children's Friendship Training social group at Touro University's Center for Autism and Developmental Disabilities.

Edward O'Connell walked outside his Las Vegas home and began to play with some boys in his neighborhood.

It might sound like your typical after-school or Saturday morning neighborhood activity.
It's not.

Edward, 9, has autism. And until that particular day, he had shown no desire to play with other kids. It's a task just to get him to show interest in his own family, said his mother, Sue O'Connell.

But through a new social skills training group offered at Touro University's Center for Autism and Developmental Disabilities, Edward and other children with autism spectrum disorders are starting to reach out.

"I just want him (Edward) to be as normal as possible,'' O'Connell said one Wednesday night following a social group session at Touro. "I want him to know the rules, that there are other people in the room. I want him to look people in the eye. I want him to understand that people have feelings. I want him to have friends."

O'Connell believes Touro's social skills group, known as Children's Friendship Training, has provided him help that no other autism program has yet to match.

The training, modeled after a program at the University of California, Los Angeles, is a 12-week program designed to provide children with tools to help them communicate.

Those tools include teaching children how to interact with others by having back and forth conversations. The group also aims to teach children how to be good sports and offer praise to others.

What's unique about the group is that parents are involved.

As their children are in one room, parents take part in their own social skills class where they learn how to assist their children in acquiring the social skills they lack.

"If you think about the general way society is structured, language and communication is what drives us. We have to be able to communicate, and yet social skills are never really ever taught,'' said Nicole Cavenaugh, director of clinical neuropsychology at Touro's Center for Autism and Developmental Disabilities.

"It's not like you take a class to learn appropriate social interaction. But one of the core features of children with an autism spectrum disorder is that they have major deficiencies in the area of social communication. Right away, the deck is stacked against them."

Autism spectrum disorders are developmental disorders that cause substantial impairments in social interaction and communications. Many children don't respond to their names.

Children who are autistic typically begin showing signs by age 3. They often lose their ability to make sounds and walk, and their social skills disappear. Some exhibit more severe symptoms than others.

In some situations, children with autism don't know how to determine if someone is happy or upset.

"We can show a child with an autism spectrum disorder a photo of someone who is smiling and ask them to tell us what that person is feeling, and they can't. They're just not in tune with other people,'' Cavenaugh said. "They lack interpreting skills.''

Lawmakers are pushing health insurance providers to cover autism treatment and therapies, something they haven't always done.

Nevada legislators are considering Assembly Bill 162, which would require insurance companies licensed in the state to cover autism treatment.