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I stand on concrete floors at work too, and the best shoes I have found so

far are Dr Scholls sneakers with gel heel inserts. My feet don't hurt

nearly as much when I get done work now. I bought them at WalMart a couple

of months ago.

Diane - in NJ ~0) (my never ending cup of coffee, lol)

dianeflemings@...

" Until one has loved an animal, a part of one's soul

remains unawakened. " - Anatole France

------------------------------------------------

From: [mailto: ] On

Behalf Of

Sent: Monday, May 26, 2008 12:05 PM

Subject: [ ] help needed

I am having some serious issues with my feet mostly at work I work on

concrete floors and my feet hurt so bad and burn at times I bought sketchers

and a dozen other shoes and still no luck I also have bought all the inserts

they carrie at the drug store ant suggestions greatly appreciated.

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me too Jan, SAS are wonderfuly.  you can wear them for 3-5 years. and as you say

they are in every style, work, church, athletic events, house work, etc.  I wish

everyone that Ra in their

feet could wear SAS for one day..  Rita

Re: [ ] help needed

Hi,

I have to add that I love my SAS shoes. many years ago before dx my feet

were killing. My Dr. was no help in finding relief. I went to a family run

shoe store and she listened to me and suggested that I buy the SAS shoes.

With in several weeks my feet were much better.

I even wear them with formal clothing. Hurting is not Pretty! :)

Hugs,

Jan S

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your blessings be more

and nothing but happiness

come through your door!

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Hello :

& nbsp;

I have the same problem, so I went to a foot dr. & nbsp; He x-rayed both feet,

which are so very bad with R A, I can hardly stand the pain most days,

etc. & nbsp; He told me to buy new running shoes, as I always bought cross

trainers or walkers. & nbsp; Also, he gave me new inserts for my new shoes, and

told me to buy them & nbsp;1 size bigger than I normally & nbsp;wear. & nbsp; What a

diff. this had made for me!!! & nbsp; I got 2 diff. types of inserts from

him. & nbsp; One set I use most of the time, and when my feet are outrageous with

pain etc. I use the other set. & nbsp; Both sets are so comfortable, and you can

feel the diff. right away. & nbsp; I bought Rebok runners, the best ones they

make, and my feet are very happy. & nbsp; He suggested Rebok, New Balance,

Sauconey,

Nike. & nbsp; & nbsp;Rebok was the first outlet I went to, and I made out

great. & nbsp; I am waiting for a sale, so I can get 2 pairs, and 1 free. & nbsp; I

have tried on New Balance, but they never felt good on my feet. & nbsp; & nbsp;All

my friends swear by them, and buy only them. & nbsp; I guess we all have to find

the brand that works the best for us. & nbsp;

& nbsp;

I hope this helps you. & nbsp; I know I can't walk on cement floors, as it does

the same thing to my feet. & nbsp; I rarely go to the Mall for this reason. & nbsp;

I pray you can find the right shoes for you

so your feet will be better, and happy!!!

& nbsp;

God Bless, and I wish you pain free days.

Barbara & nbsp;

From: & lt;jultep@... & gt;

Subject: [ ] help needed

Date: Monday, May 26, 2008, 4:05 PM

I am having some serious issues with my feet mostly at work I work on concrete

floors and my feet hurt so bad and burn at times I bought sketchers and a dozen

other shoes and still no luck I also have bought all the inserts they carrie at

the drug store ant suggestions greatly appreciated.

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  • 1 year later...

Do any of you have measurable goals that might pertain to a high functioning

child.  I have been scouring the Internet for measurable goals for

an autistic child and honestly she has mastered all of the goals that I

have found.  I am at a loss and I have an IEP meeting in 10 days so

there is not much time to prepare.  Thanks in advance,  Sheri

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This is how we do it for my son, as well, but we also include social goals

where needed/appropriate.

Kristy

From: [mailto: ] On Behalf Of Robyn

& Greg Coggins

Sent: Tuesday, September 15, 2009 6:51 PM

Subject: Re: Help needed

If she's high functioning, look at the standards for whatever grade she's in

and adjust them according to reasonable expectation for achievement. Make

them realistic, so she doesn't get frustrated. Remember you can always call

another IEP if she quickly masters goals. I'm not sure where you're located,

but grade standards can be found on most states' department of education

websites or your school should have them. My son has mild/moderate autism

and this is the method I use for him, although much more adjustment is

needed than it probably would be with a child who is high functioning.

Good luck!

Robyn

--- On Tue, 9/15/09, Sheri <eszbi5@... <mailto:eszbi5%40> >

wrote:

From: Sheri <eszbi5@... <mailto:eszbi5%40> >

Subject: Help needed

<mailto:%40>

Date: Tuesday, September 15, 2009, 6:39 PM

Do any of you have measurable goals that might pertain to a high functioning

child. I have been scouring the Internet for measurable goals for

an autistic child and honestly she has mastered all of the goals that I

have found. I am at a loss and I have an IEP meeting in 10 days so

there is not much time to prepare. Thanks in advance, Sheri

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Same here!

From: Kristy Nardini <knardini@...>

Subject: RE: Help needed

Date: Tuesday, September 15, 2009, 8:28 PM

 

This is how we do it for my son, as well, but we also include

social goals

where needed/appropriate.

Kristy

From: groups (DOT) com [mailto:groups (DOT) com] On Behalf Of Robyn

& Greg Coggins

Sent: Tuesday, September 15, 2009 6:51 PM

groups (DOT) com

Subject: Re: Help needed

If she's high functioning, look at the standards for whatever grade she's in

and adjust them according to reasonable expectation for achievement. Make

them realistic, so she doesn't get frustrated. Remember you can always call

another IEP if she quickly masters goals. I'm not sure where you're located,

but grade standards can be found on most states' department of education

websites or your school should have them. My son has mild/moderate autism

and this is the method I use for him, although much more adjustment is

needed than it probably would be with a child who is high functioning.

Good luck!

Robyn

--- On Tue, 9/15/09, Sheri <eszbi5 (DOT) com <mailto:eszbi5% 40> >

wrote:

From: Sheri <eszbi5 (DOT) com <mailto:eszbi5% 40> >

Subject: Help needed

groups (DOT) com <mailto:% 40groups. com>

Date: Tuesday, September 15, 2009, 6:39 PM

Do any of you have measurable goals that might pertain to a high functioning

child. I have been scouring the Internet for measurable goals for

an autistic child and honestly she has mastered all of the goals that I

have found. I am at a loss and I have an IEP meeting in 10 days so

there is not much time to prepare. Thanks in advance, Sheri

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Can you write goals that are at grade level?  I tried to do this in the

preschool setting and was told that he wouldn't need an IEP if he was doing

grade level work.  But he needs strategies to do that grade level work and I

felt this would be where the IEP is necessary.  Or he needs a small group

setting to do grade level work.  Are those things acceptable to do in an IEP?

________________________________

From: and Daron Freedberg <mdfreedberg@...>

Sent: Wednesday, September 16, 2009 8:41:10 AM

Subject: Re: Help needed

 

You can also look at the grade level above and work on goals toward

those objectives. This is what we do. Then our daughter has an easier

time mastering some of the standards because she has tools and

strategies to draw on.

Robyn & Greg Coggins wrote:

>

>

> If she's high functioning, look at the standards for whatever grade

> she's in and adjust them according to reasonable expectation for

> achievement. Make them realistic, so she doesn't get frustrated.

> Remember you can always call another IEP if she quickly masters goals.

> I'm not sure where you're located, but grade standards can be found on

> most states' department of education websites or your school should

> have them. My son has mild/moderate autism and this is the method I

> use for him, although much more adjustment is needed than it probably

> would be with a child who is high functioning.

>

> Good luck!

>

> Robyn

>

>

>

> From: Sheri <eszbi5 (DOT) com <mailto:eszbi5% 40> >

> Subject: Help needed

> groups (DOT) com <mailto:% 40groups. com>

> Date: Tuesday, September 15, 2009, 6:39 PM

>

>

>

> Do any of you have measurable goals that might pertain to a high

> functioning child. I have been scouring the Internet for measurable

> goals for

>

> an autistic child and honestly she has mastered all of the goals that I

>

> have found. I am at a loss and I have an IEP meeting in 10 days so

>

> there is not much time to prepare. Thanks in advance, Sheri

>

>

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Yes they are acceptable and what they're telling you is incorrect. Use the grade

level goals as a guideline. For example, if the grade level goal is to count to

and recognize numbers 0-100, your child's goals may be just to 50. The goal

could be to 100, but with special accommodations, such as oral prompting, small

group settings, etc.

HTH,

Robyn

________________________________

From: <stacy171@...>

Sent: Wednesday, September 16, 2009 10:08:49 AM

Subject: Re: Help needed

Can you write goals that are at grade level? I tried to do this in the

preschool setting and was told that he wouldn't need an IEP if he was doing

grade level work. But he needs strategies to do that grade level work and I

felt this would be where the IEP is necessary. Or he needs a small group

setting to do grade level work. Are those things acceptable to do in an IEP?

____________ _________ _________ __

From: and Daron Freedberg <mdfreedberg@ verizon.net>

groups (DOT) com

Sent: Wednesday, September 16, 2009 8:41:10 AM

Subject: Re: Help needed

You can also look at the grade level above and work on goals toward

those objectives. This is what we do. Then our daughter has an easier

time mastering some of the standards because she has tools and

strategies to draw on.

Robyn & Greg Coggins wrote:

>

>

> If she's high functioning, look at the standards for whatever grade

> she's in and adjust them according to reasonable expectation for

> achievement. Make them realistic, so she doesn't get frustrated.

> Remember you can always call another IEP if she quickly masters goals.

> I'm not sure where you're located, but grade standards can be found on

> most states' department of education websites or your school should

> have them. My son has mild/moderate autism and this is the method I

> use for him, although much more adjustment is needed than it probably

> would be with a child who is high functioning.

>

> Good luck!

>

> Robyn

>

>

>

> From: Sheri <eszbi5 (DOT) com <mailto:eszbi5% 40> >

> Subject: Help needed

> groups (DOT) com <mailto:% 40groups. com>

> Date: Tuesday, September 15, 2009, 6:39 PM

>

>

>

> Do any of you have measurable goals that might pertain to a high

> functioning child. I have been scouring the Internet for measurable

> goals for

>

> an autistic child and honestly she has mastered all of the goals that I

>

> have found. I am at a loss and I have an IEP meeting in 10 days so

>

> there is not much time to prepare. Thanks in advance, Sheri

>

>

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  • 8 months later...
Guest guest

hi

Does anyone have the contact details for Dr G

situation:

a family i know here in australia has just had their childern taken from them by

DOCS (department of child servrices), for treating their childern biomedically,

with diet, supplements etc. DOCS are claiming that this is a form of abuse.

anyway the family are in court next week and have to provide evidence that diet

and certain supplements etc can be used to treat autism effectively.

the DOCs lawyers have discredited the biomedical Dr on the case, the family do

have another international Dr from the US testifying on their behalf, but i

thought that another might help get their case.the family have had alot of

testing done, and are awaiting on results from belgium re the immune system

function.

so any help would be appreciated

thanks

From: karla_fine@...

Date: Wed, 9 Jun 2010 20:13:34 -0700

Subject: Re: Re: HBOT

We used HBOT, no apparent gains were seen

From: chocolatiluv <chocolatiluv@...>

Subject: Re: HBOT

Date: Wednesday, June 9, 2010, 6:51 AM

>

> Has anyone used hyperbaric oxygen with kids on the

> autism spectrum or with general developmental issues?

> I would be interested in hearing from anyone who might

> have an opinion or experience in this area.

> kb

>

> __________________________________________________

>

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Guest guest

Omg, that is terrible!

Sent from my iPhone

On Jun 10, 2010, at 1:30 PM, Mel J <mel.j@...> wrote:

hi

Does anyone have the contact details for Dr G

situation:

a family i know here in australia has just had their childern taken from them by

DOCS (department of child servrices), for treating their childern biomedically,

with diet, supplements etc. DOCS are claiming that this is a form of abuse.

anyway the family are in court next week and have to provide evidence that diet

and certain supplements etc can be used to treat autism effectively.

the DOCs lawyers have discredited the biomedical Dr on the case, the family do

have another international Dr from the US testifying on their behalf, but i

thought that another might help get their case.the family have had alot of

testing done, and are awaiting on results from belgium re the immune system

function.

so any help would be appreciated

thanks

From: karla_fine@...

Date: Wed, 9 Jun 2010 20:13:34 -0700

Subject: Re: Re: HBOT

We used HBOT, no apparent gains were seen

From: chocolatiluv <chocolatiluv@...>

Subject: Re: HBOT

Date: Wednesday, June 9, 2010, 6:51 AM

Has anyone used hyperbaric oxygen with kids on the

autism spectrum or with general developmental issues?

I would be interested in hearing from anyone who might

have an opinion or experience in this area.

kb

__________________________________________________

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Guest guest

818.343.1010 or www.neuroimmunedr.com

Kristy Nardini

Tazzini Stainless Steel Bottles

http://www.tazzini.com

kristy@...

Phone: 858.243.1929

Fax: 858.724.1418

Re: HBOT

Date: Wednesday, June 9, 2010, 6:51 AM

--- In , Bradtke <bradtke_katherine@...>

wrote:

>

> Has anyone used hyperbaric oxygen with kids on the

> autism spectrum or with general developmental issues?

> I would be interested in hearing from anyone who might

> have an opinion or experience in this area.

> kb

>

> __________________________________________________

>

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Guest guest

thanks Kristy

have passed the information on.

it seems to becoming a regular thing here in oz, if you treat your childern in

what is considered an uncoventional way, well not recognised by the wider

commity, this sort of things happen, there are a lot of cases and more since the

biomedical approach is used by more and more families. Yet what i find

disgusting is that real abuse and neglect goes on without intervention, so go

figure that one

From: knardini@...

Date: Thu, 10 Jun 2010 14:01:35 -0700

Subject: RE: Re: Help needed

818.343.1010 or www.neuroimmunedr.com

Kristy Nardini

Tazzini Stainless Steel Bottles

http://www.tazzini.com

kristy@...

Phone: 858.243.1929

Fax: 858.724.1418

Re: HBOT

Date: Wednesday, June 9, 2010, 6:51 AM

--- In , Bradtke <bradtke_katherine@...>

wrote:

>

> Has anyone used hyperbaric oxygen with kids on the

> autism spectrum or with general developmental issues?

> I would be interested in hearing from anyone who might

> have an opinion or experience in this area.

> kb

>

> __________________________________________________

>

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