Finding What Works - Dealing With Autism
When dealing with
autism, just as in most other disorders, you will be faced with a number
of treatment options for yourself or your child. These include
treatments that are educational, behavioral, biomedical, nutritional,
and sensory.
Unfortunately, for patients who are
not affluent or who do not have good medical insurance, the cost of
these treatments can be pricier than what they can afford. One way to
ensure that you or your child receives the best possible treatment for
autism is to carefully monitor the effects a treatment has over time. By
finding out which treatments work and which do not, you can stop paying
for the ineffective methods and put more of your money into those which
are creating a positive difference.
First, evaluate the abilities of the
autistic individual before treatment begins. To do this, many services
and organizations, including the Autism Research Institute, provide a
checklist of evaluation points that focus on behavior and illnesses
associated with autism. Autistic individuals tend to have increasing
functionality as they mature, so remember that some of the positive
effects in his or her life are simply due to the natural growth process.
However, after two months fill out the checklist once again and compare
it to the first. Are there any sharp positive increases in behavior
characteristics? If so, this is more likely due to the treatment.
It is important to begin only one
treatment method at a time. If you try everything at once instead, good
and bad effects may cancel one another out, or even if the effect is
totally positive, you will not know which treatment method is causing it
and which are not doing anything. Of course, past studies can help you
choose which methods to use, but because autism is an extremely
complicated and individual disorder, these studies are not always
helpful. Also, some treatments are so new that the studies done are only
on short-term effects, which is usually unhelpful. Instead, it is a
process of trial and error. Two months is a good amount of time to study
the differences within an autistic individual trying a new treatment.
After two months, if you do not see positive improvement, you can
discontinue your use of that particular method and better invest your
money in treatment options that work.
Remember that you do not always have to wait two months to make choices
about whether to continue or discontinue a treatment method. If the side
effects of a medication, for example, are interfering with the patient’s
life in an unbearable way, then you should discontinue the treatment.
You can also make continual treatments based on immediate good
reactions—just remember to continually monitor the various methods.
Autistic individuals grow and mature just like everyone else, so
treatments may stop working after time. Before trying anything new,
consult your doctor to make sure you are being as safe and healthy as
possible
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