Guest guest Posted November 15, 2010 Report Share Posted November 15, 2010 , Locally here in Boca Raton we have a lab and do special urine and saliva testing on the Bio Chemistry for children on the autism spectrum. It's very affordable and really addresses the abnormal bio chemistry these children have. Absolutely as some parents have posted, nutritional supplementation and diet have changed behaviors in their children because deficits are being addressed. Children with autism do not desire to have the behaviors they have....there are underlying abnormalities in the immune system that affect their neurological, sensory, nervous and immune systems and THAT all affects behaviors because the abnormalities occurred prior to three years of age so their neurodevelopment regressed. If this was only a behavioral problem then parents would only need to be parenting better and the kids should respond as do normal kids when parents enforce discipline techniques. Obviously every parent with autism out there knows their parenting skills are not the reason why their child acts the way they do. Any kind of behavioral approach is important and necessary but not the whole picture. If you are interested in an affordable biomedical approach contact me and check out the website www.pHtestlab.com www.pHtestlab.com Back to Balance Badillo9@... I've been reading the emails and everyone has made a lot of really great points. Unfortunately for me I've been dealing with insurances for my son since he was born due to him being a preemie and now has autism. Also the cost of what treatments we can afford and the need to survive. It sucks in general for all of us. My son has mild autism but reading your posts with the child or children who are more severe than him kills me. The one thing we have in common is what the insurance is NOT covering for our kids and the out of pocket expenses we have to under take. Sent on the Sprint® Now Network from my BlackBerry® From: playparent@... Sender: sList Date: Sun, 14 Nov 2010 12:54:45 -0500 (EST) To: <sList > ReplyTo: sList Subject: Re: Study Reveals Children Recover From Autism With Intensive Three- When you go back to the original studies done at UCLA, you will find that the recommendation for ABA is 40 hours per week. Many children are receiving far less then that. I don't care how much behavioral therapy you give a child, if their guts hurt, and their brains are starving, how in the world are they supposed to make new connections? If their CNS is telling them to stay in freeze mode and anxiety but you bypass all that to get to the top down method anyway by rewards and motivations, then how does that truly change an individual? Young children learn through their BODY not their brain. When the body gets what it needs first, then parents will see changes in all areas. Integration of reflexes, vision, auditory, vestibular and proprioceptive input comes first just as it would naturally for a newborn. Bottom up, not top down. If therapists, teachers, parents, and all involved persons did 40 hours of correct movement with the child WOW what a change that would be! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 15, 2010 Report Share Posted November 15, 2010 Is there a free consultation? Sent from my Samsung Epic™ 4G badillo9@... wrote: >, >Locally here in Boca Raton we have a lab and do special urine and saliva >testing on the Bio Chemistry for children on the autism spectrum. It's very >affordable and really addresses the abnormal bio chemistry these children >have. Absolutely as some parents have posted, nutritional supplementation and >diet have changed behaviors in their children because deficits are being >addressed. Children with autism do not desire to have the behaviors they >have....there are underlying abnormalities in the immune system that affect >their neurological, sensory, nervous and immune systems and THAT all affects >behaviors because the abnormalities occurred prior to three years of age so >their neurodevelopment regressed. > >If this was only a behavioral problem then parents would only need to be >parenting better and the kids should respond as do normal kids when parents >enforce discipline techniques. Obviously every parent with autism out there >knows their parenting skills are not the reason why their child acts the >way they do. Any kind of behavioral approach is important and necessary but >not the whole picture. > >If you are interested in an affordable biomedical approach contact me and >check out the website _www.pHtestlab.com_ (http://www.pHtestlab.com) > > >_www.pHtestlab.com_ (http://www.pHtestlab.com) >Back to Balance >_Badillo9@..._ (mailto:Badillo9@...) > > > > >In a message dated 11/15/2010 8:22:50 A.M. Eastern Standard Time, >ewihlborg@... writes: > > > > >I've been reading the emails and everyone has made a lot of really great >points. > >Unfortunately for me I've been dealing with insurances for my son since he >was born due to him being a preemie and now has autism. Also the cost of >what treatments we can afford and the need to survive. It sucks in general >for all of us. > >My son has mild autism but reading your posts with the child or children >who are more severe than him kills me. The one thing we have in common is >what the insurance is NOT covering for our kids and the out of pocket >expenses we have to under take. > > >Sent on the Sprint® Now Network from my BlackBerry® >____________________________________ > >From: playparent@... >Sender: sList >Date: Sun, 14 Nov 2010 12:54:45 -0500 (EST) >To: <sList > >ReplyTo: sList >Subject: Re: Study Reveals Children Recover From Autism With >Intensive Three- > > > >When you go back to the original studies done at UCLA, you will find that >the recommendation for ABA is 40 hours per week. Many children are receiving > far less then that. I don't care how much behavioral therapy you give a >child, if their guts hurt, and their brains are starving, how in the world >are they supposed to make new connections? If their CNS is telling them to >stay in freeze mode and anxiety but you bypass all that to get to the top >down method anyway by rewards and motivations, then how does that truly change >an individual? Young children learn through their BODY not their brain. >When the body gets what it needs first, then parents will see changes in all >areas. Integration of reflexes, vision, auditory, vestibular and >proprioceptive input comes first just as it would naturally for a newborn. Bottom up, >not top down. If therapists, teachers, parents, and all involved persons >did 40 hours of correct movement with the child WOW what a change that would >be! > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 15, 2010 Report Share Posted November 15, 2010 Hanks for the email. I'm sure others on the listserv will enjoy the information you posted. Sent on the Sprint® Now Network from my BlackBerry®From: badillo9@...Sender: sList Date: Mon, 15 Nov 2010 10:46:02 -0500 (EST)To: <sList >ReplyTo: sList Subject: Re: Re: Study Reveals Children Recover From Autism With Intensi... ,Locally here in Boca Raton we have a lab and do special urine and saliva testing on the Bio Chemistry for children on the autism spectrum. It's very affordable and really addresses the abnormal bio chemistry these children have. Absolutely as some parents have posted, nutritional supplementation and diet have changed behaviors in their children because deficits are being addressed. Children with autism do not desire to have the behaviors they have....there are underlying abnormalities in the immune system that affect their neurological, sensory, nervous and immune systems and THAT all affects behaviors because the abnormalities occurred prior to three years of age so their neurodevelopment regressed. If this was only a behavioral problem then parents would only need to be parenting better and the kids should respond as do normal kids when parents enforce discipline techniques. Obviously every parent with autism out there knows their parenting skills are not the reason why their child acts the way they do. Any kind of behavioral approach is important and necessary but not the whole picture. If you are interested in an affordable biomedical approach contact me and check out the website www.pHtestlab.com www.pHtestlab.comBack to BalanceBadillo9@... I've been reading the emails and everyone has made a lot of really great points. Unfortunately for me I've been dealing with insurances for my son since he was born due to him being a preemie and now has autism. Also the cost of what treatments we can afford and the need to survive. It sucks in general for all of us. My son has mild autism but reading your posts with the child or children who are more severe than him kills me. The one thing we have in common is what the insurance is NOT covering for our kids and the out of pocket expenses we have to under take. Sent on the Sprint® Now Network from my BlackBerry®From: playparent@... Sender: sList Date: Sun, 14 Nov 2010 12:54:45 -0500 (EST)To: <sList >ReplyTo: sList Subject: Re: Study Reveals Children Recover From Autism With Intensive Three- When you go back to the original studies done at UCLA, you will find that the recommendation for ABA is 40 hours per week. Many children are receiving far less then that. I don't care how much behavioral therapy you give a child, if their guts hurt, and their brains are starving, how in the world are they supposed to make new connections? If their CNS is telling them to stay in freeze mode and anxiety but you bypass all that to get to the top down method anyway by rewards and motivations, then how does that truly change an individual? Young children learn through their BODY not their brain. When the body gets what it needs first, then parents will see changes in all areas. Integration of reflexes, vision, auditory, vestibular and proprioceptive input comes first just as it would naturally for a newborn. Bottom up, not top down. If therapists, teachers, parents, and all involved persons did 40 hours of correct movement with the child WOW what a change that would be! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 15, 2010 Report Share Posted November 15, 2010 Yes...Jodi...contact me to set something up badillo9@... Re: Study Reveals Children Recover From Autism With >Intensive Three- > > > >When you go back to the original studies done at UCLA, you will find that >the recommendation for ABA is 40 hours per week. Many children are receiving > far less then that. I don't care how much behavioral therapy you give a >child, if their guts hurt, and their brains are starving, how in the world >are they supposed to make new connections? If their CNS is telling them to >stay in freeze mode and anxiety but you bypass all that to get to the top >down method anyway by rewards and motivations, then how does that truly change >an individual? Young children learn through their BODY not their brain. >When the body gets what it needs first, then parents will see changes in all >areas. Integration of reflexes, vision, auditory, vestibular and >proprioceptive input comes first just as it would naturally for a newborn. Bottom up, >not top down. If therapists, teachers, parents, and all involved persons >did 40 hours of correct movement with the child WOW what a change that would >be! > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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